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449:, which provide a neutral location where supervised parenting time can occur on specified occasions. Such centres are intended to be transitional, though where mutual or unilateral hostilities between parents persist, moving on from the use of contact centres can require further court appearances. Fathers' rights campaigners argue that shortages of places at contact centres are used as reasons to prevent them seeing their children and that frequently the only reason given for using a contact centre in those cases is that the mother demands it. Rather than devoting funds to extend the network of contact centres, some fathers' rights campaigners argue that contact centres should only be used for a specific small minority of cases, such as where there are health reasons why the father cannot care for his children unaided. 553:
presumption of reasonable contact with their children, except where a child's safety would be at risk, so that children are able to benefit from being parented by both their parents, as well as from contact with any grandparents and extended family members able and willing to play a role in their upbringing; regrets the Government's opposition to such a legal presumption, which will lead to yet more children being denied access to both their parents and their extended families; views with concern the Government's failure to implement the Early Intervention Project; and calls on the Government to replace the legal term 'contact' with 'parenting time', to introduce a legal presumption of co-parenting and to introduce early intervention in parental separation, with court-backed mediation and guidelines on parenting-time.
94:, as the divorce rate increased, so did the number of children involved in divorce. "The number of children involved in divorces and annulments stood at 6.3 per 1,000 children under 18 years of age in 1950, and 7.2 in 1960. By 1970 it had increased to 12.5; by 1975, 16.7; by 1980, the rate stood at 17.3, a 175 percent increase from 1950. Since in 1972, one million American children every year have seen their parents divorce. " (Brian Willats, Breaking Up is Easy To Do, available from Michigan Family Forum, citing Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1993.) Thus, whether these divorces are contested or not, the courts may be called upon make judgements about the lives of the children. 258:
courts. To prevent this, they argue that allegations of assault should be dealt with by traditional courts, and only actual convictions taken into account in child contact proceedings, although social policy experts have pointed out that domestic violence is an insidious phenomenon and that evidence other than that of convictions might also be valid. Fathers' rights campaigners believe that the lowered thresholds for what types of conduct can be construed as violent could be used in child proceedings to make unfounded allegations of violence against them on more tenuous grounds than would have been acceptable previously, and, according to the 2000 report
403:, such as exists in the UK, is biased towards the mother, whose fears may be taken as fact. Fathers must then try to demonstrate that they present no risk to the children, and that continued contact will be of benefit to the children. Although such considerations can play a part in making compassionate decisions about children in the aftermath of a family break-up, fathers' rights activists argue that the law as it currently stands in the UK implicitly links the interests of the child with those of the mother. In a case in the UK in 1999 ( 194:
it does to fathers, reducing many divorced fathers' involvement in their children's lives to the role solely of providing financial support, with minimal parental involvement. Although family courts generally do issue decrees that allow fathers to provide some parenting time, many judgements have been criticised for not allowing fathers to be as involved as they would like to be, and the courts criticised for failing to enforce their orders. According to a committee of members of parliament on
98:
children. The state benefits and support provided to single mothers can be viewed as making the father's parental role redundant when the parents don't live together. Fathers' rights campaigners oppose this notion and point to research showing that having an involved father brings benefits for children, and that it is generally harmful to deny children the right to know and be cared for by both their parents when both parents are available to provide for the children's needs.
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shown to be detrimental to children who are exposed to conflict between their parents. Joint custody also asks a lot of children. Many of them cannot handle the shunting back and forth between homes very well. They also must keep track of which home they are to be in on a given day, which is stressful for them. They lose track of their friends, and their extracurricular activities suffer when parents pay too much attention to when the children are to be with them.”
726:"Williams, a 36-year-old nurse, knows from experience the picture painted by militant men’s groups can sometimes be far from the truth. Her ex-husband is a member of one - and in her view, he forfeited his ‘right’ of access when he drove the family out of the house to a women’s refuge. (The police had warned her that, if she didn’t leave soon, she’d leave in a box.)" 216:
situation, and that it is unfair to divide children's time between their parents simply because the parents are no longer married. They argue that children's normal cognitive development (particularly that of very small children) and the formation of their identity is dependent upon the existence of a certain level of familiarity with traditional
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all around us. Teenage crime, drug taking, truancy and general delinquency
 The UK has the second highest rate of young offending in Western Europe. Is it coincidence that the explosion in young offending has happened under a government that is systematically denying thousands of children ‘contact’ with their fathers?"
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NAPO, the union representing family court staff, compiled a dossier detailing the abuse they claim that their members have suffered at the hands of fathers' rights groups, including being sent fake letter bombs and hate mail, having rotting meat put through an office letter box and being subjected to
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At a local level, many fathers' rights groups provide support for newly separated fathers, many of whom may be highly distraught and even suicidal. These feelings are caused by missing their children; uncertainty, sometimes over long periods, about what the outcome will be; the loss of a family home
758:
Fathers' rights advocates believe that the breakdown in the traditional family and traditional gender roles, where the woman is the homemaker and the man goes out to work, are the causes of social problems. "The legacy of the family breakdown and the fragmentation of parent/child relationships is
257:
Fathers' rights activists argue that as domestic violence is overwhelmingly seen as a crime committed by men against their female partners, mothers can make allegations of domestic violence in order to gain custody of children or to end children's contact with their father, which are believed by the
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Activists within the movement seek to restructure family law, arguing that children benefit from being raised by both parents, and that children should thus be allowed to interact with both parents on a regular basis as of right. Currently family law awards primary custody to mothers more often than
747:
Fathers' rights advocacy of “shared parenting”, a euphemism for joint custody, presumes that the interests of the child are inevitably best served by a presumption of a 50-50 split of their time between both parents. However, this has been challenged by Trish Wilson who says “Joint custody has been
722:
Anti-fathers' rights activists often also point to the number of prominent fathers' rights advocates who, although claiming to represent blameless wronged fathers, were themselves perpetrators of domestic violence. "Former wives and girlfriends who spoke to the Guardian described relationship break
407:
2 FLR 703) the father of a six-year-old was granted permission by a court to see his child, but the mother indicated that she was distressed and fearful about this contact. This distress was apparent to the child, who felt guilty about seeing his father, so the court ordered that the father should
362:
Recent research cited by the fathers' rights movement (cf. Flouri and Buchannan) contends that the involvement of a father is more important to chilren's welfare than having a single base. They also believe that any decision should be in part based on how much time the father spent at home with his
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In the UK, it is generally believed that it is in the children's best interests to maintain a living situation that comes closest to what they have already known, the "single base" argument, which most often involves the mother remining in the former family home with primary responsibility for the
318:
requires that the views of the child need to be made known to the court, fathers' rights campaigners claim that mothers sometimes attempt to influence a child against their father and that this then supports the mother's case in court to end the child's contact with the father. The existence of a
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Fathers' rights groups also oppose what they see as "sexist" presumptions about domestic violence, that is is usually perpetrated by men against their female partners. They cite statistics from Canada which contend that step-fathers are more likely to kill their step-children than fathers to kill
97:
Western countries have increasingly provided extra support to single parent families, as they are usually poorer than two-parent families. Lone parenting, once the subject of social stigma, has become increasingly acceptable and has been come to be regarded as providing an adequate upbringing for
89:
The fathers' rights movement has existed since the 1970s. It has its roots in the increasing number of marriages which end in divorce; currently over 50% of all first marriages in the United States end in divorce, and the divorce rate for subsequent marriages is higher. More than half of all these
350:
model has been that most usually adopted and pursued by the courts. Fathers' rights activists acknowledge that a system that gives one parent the opportunity (but not the obligation) to remain involved in the children's lives after separation might suit some situations (perhaps where the father's
101:
Father's rights advocates argue that the high divorce rate, the reduced stigma attached to lone parent families and increased state support for single parents (usually mothers) mean that fathers have became marginalised. They cite examples where they believe fathers have been outmanoevred in the
418:
Fathers' rights activists argue that the fmaily court system is excessively slow and cumbersome, resulting in unnecessarily long separations occurring between fathers and children during and after lengthy periods of court hearings. They argue that this time would be better spent dealing with the
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of family law cases in England, Wales, Ireland and Australia. Fathers' rights advocates argue that there would be better protection against what they see as abuses if family court judgements could be published in an anonymised fashion, as is allowed in Scotland, which operates under a different
269:
Some fathers' rights campaigners hold that there is a trend towards falsification of domestic violence claims in child contact cases. However, this is not proved and is controversial. For example, the Domestic Violence Legislation Working Group of Australia have stated that there is no "firm
215:
Fathers' rights activists have been critical of the assumption that the child(ren) of divorced parents should live with one parent and be visited by the other, which they view as "separationist". Fathers' rights activists argue that children tend to do better if they are not placed in such a
331:
There is, of course, no doubt that some parents, particularly mothers, are responsible for alienating their children from their fathers without good reason and thereby creating this sometimes insoluble problem. That unhappy state of affairs, well known in family courts, is a long way from a
233:
Critics of the fathers' rights movement have argued that since most men still earn more than women, and most mothers stay at home with young children, it makes sense to award primary custody of children to mothers more often than to fathers. Fathers' rights campaigners argue that this is a
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That this House agrees that on the separation of parents, priority should be given to the interests of the children; believes that it is in the best interests of all children for both parents to be fully involved in their upbringing and hence that separated parents should each have a legal
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Fathers' rights activists believe that family court judges are biased against them, in contrary to the view held by the general public which believes that in the rare exceptions when a ruling drastically affecting a child's life must be made, it is made by a high-minded, impartial judge.
20:
at the moment. As well as being POV and biased towards the movement, it's also badly written, so it's taking longer than I thought. If you've got any suggestions to make, please do so on my talk page. I'd appreciate suggestions and help. The version here is by no means complete.
295:. They believe that there is a domestic violence "lobby", which uses emotional arguments and encourages women to oppose their children's continued contact with their fathers. However, in a statement to the select committee hearing evidence for the Children and Contact Bill 2005, 619:, have unwittingly made him a champion of the fathers' rights movement. Mr Blunkett said about his son, "He will want to know not just that his father actually cared enough about him to sacrifice his career, but he will want to know, I hope, that his mother has some regret." 699:
The effect of fathers' rights campaigns have been to put pressure on the family courts to grant contact even where it may not be safe to do so, putting more vulnerable women and children at risk, acording to the chief executives of Women’s Aid and Refuge and the police.
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points out, “in 1998, only 3 per cent of fathers’ applications for contact orders were refused. By 2001 this had dropped to 1.3 per cent - that is 713, a figure which barely covers the number of men who murdered their wives and schedule one offenders (child abusers)”.
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The Newham Domestic Violence Project says that “when mothers try to protect their children from abusive fathers, they are often viewed by the courts and welfare professionals not as protective, but as obstructive, manipulative and irrationally ‘implacably hostile’."
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that the father may have manifested in the past is claimed to be treated as justification for limiting his involvement in his children's upbringing. If he is inexperienced at parenting, the result may be that he is initially not trusted to provide basic
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Opponents of fathers' rights groups challenge the premise of such groups that there is bias in the family law system against fathers. That there is no bias in family courts was upheld by the House of Commons Constitutional Affairs Committee in 2004.
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circumstances do not permit him to provide a full range of care for his children), but they argue that this model does not suit all cases, and that shared residency agreements or orders should become the norm. These are becoming more common since the
286:
in family court cases is very seldom, if ever, followed up by family court judges in the UK, where the police will not usually act in cases of alleged criminal perjury without the consent of the judge in whose court it was alleged to have occurred.
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Fathers' rights activists believe that the disadvantage they experience is hidden because family court judgments are not open to public scrutiny, in order to protect children. A full analysis of facts about family law is made difficult by the
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The general secretary of NAPO said in her spech to the Napo conference in 2004 "CAFCASS members have during the year had to put up with more than their fair share of stress and abuse as a result of the antics of militant fathers’ groups."
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There is little worldwide co-ordinated opposition to the fathers' rights movement; however many children's, women's and domestic violence support groups, as well as some trade unions, have expressed concern about their aims and tactics.
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In the UK, some resources are provided by the government to support continued contact. When agreement can't be reached about a father being with his children in his home, courts frequently order that fathers can only see their children at
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Fathers' rights advocates believe that there there is a discourse being created in which men are intrinsically "unsafe", which can be seen in the qualification always provided by politicians that they were in favour of fathers' rights
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Instead they point out that most of the decisions of family law courts reflect the status quo, where children live with the mother, and that courts are unlikely to upset this relationship except in extreme circumstances.
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verbal abuse. "In one of the worst incidents — for which nobody has claimed responsibility — a solicitor found her car engine and headlights doused in petrol, which could have exploded when she started the engine."
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Fathers' rights advocates question the impact of domestic violence on women and children, arguing that women can use allegations of domestic violence to prevent men gaining custody or contact with their children.
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Fathers' rights campaigners are optimistic that the government must now be seen to be actually doing something to addresss public concern. Whilst government ministers have long denied that there is a problem,
230:, contend that a lack of fathers' involvement in their children's lives leads to increased criminality in males and a higher incidence of depression in females independent of the level of mother involvement. 529:
My Government believes that the welfare of children is paramount. Draft legislation will be published to safeguard the welfare of children in circumstances of parental separation and inter-country adoption.
570: 127: 120: 114: 201:, the family justice system in England and Wales gives separated and divorced fathers a raw deal and does not give enough consideration to preserving the relationship between the father and the child 739:
Opponents of the fathers' rights movement argue that the emphasis on fathers' rights undermines the presumption that the most important considerations should be what is best for the child.
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generalisation, and that fathers' roles as caregivers have increased considerably during the latter part of the 20th century. Members of the fathers' movement argue that the promotion of
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Family court judges and lawyers have also been intimidated, with angry fathers' rights advocates picketing their homes, invading their offices and launching email campaigns against them.
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In the UK, the tactics of some fathers' rights groups and some individuals have included bullying and intimidating CAFCASS (family court) staff, as reported in the national press.
91: 503:
achieved its main objective of bringing to the issues to the public's attention and creating concern that fathers were being treated unfairly in child contact proceedings.
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Some fathers' rights advocates believe that it is the judiciary rather than government who have the greatest power to bring about change. Some organisations, such as
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Many fathers have joined the fathers' rights movement after losing touch with their children, or reduced to a role where they feel they cannot be effective parents.
566: 140: 461:, have advised members to act as a litigant in person and to work towards shared residency court orders, which is claimed to have changed judicial attitudes. 337:
However, fathers' rights campaigners argue that whatever the condition is called, the impact of this form of emotional abuse should be recognised in court.
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and their decreased future income. In many cases these groups also campaign for a greater consideration towards grandparents and women in second marriages.
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courts by mothers who no longer wish them to remain involved with their children. This led to the formation of the now-worldwide fathers' rights movement.
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ups involving domestic violence, being forced to live in refuges and incidents in which their children witnessed frightening aggression by their fathers."
263: 145: 359:, examples where an order has been made which means that children should remain in the family home and the parents should alternate their presence there. 296: 647:
an over-emphasis on the "traditional" family, which sometimes manifests in anti-feminism, misogyny, homophobia and stigma towards other styles of family
616:, following his attempts to remain in touch with his youngest son, and the response of his ex-partner, which he mentioned in an interview with the BBC 299:
indicated that she had not heard, having asked the UK family judges, of a case where safety was an issue in a case of contact denial by the mother.
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pose particular problems, as the divorce and family court proceedings can effectively extend the abuse even after the partners have separated.
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no longer have contact with the child. Fathers' rights proponents say that in such circumstances, the case can easily become a witch-hunt. Any
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In 1998, Florida State Representative Randy Ball (R - Titusville) introduced reform legislation that was written by NASA's Dr. Peter Wilson of
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refers to a situation where it is alleged that one parent has caused the child to express hatred toward the other parent. Since, in the UK,
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For a many years father's rights groups were largely ignored by the mainstream media and by governments. However, in the UK, the advent of
546: 701: 521: 764:
Opponents of the fathers' rights movement point to evidence showing that there is no link between single parent families and crime.
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Some MPs are also beginning to take notice of the fathers' rights movement. There was a debate on the topic of Family Justice on
278:(AVO) system concluded that a majority of women taking out AVOs in situations of domestic violence did so genuinely. Furthermore, 167: 499:
in the US suggests that direct action can be significantly more effective than traditional political lobbying at being heard.
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to the mother, rather than their preferred default option of making provision for shared residency and care of the children.
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Additionally, family court judges are often seen by activists as not acknowledging the contribution made by a working father.
679: 266:, contact can be denied even when no domestic violence had actually occurred, but where there was fear that it might. 710: 658: 468:
in 2003 brought the cause into the mainstream media for the first time, and they have since attracted much attention.
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trauma of the parents' initial separation and allowing the children to maintain their relationships with both parents.
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an emphasis on fathers' "rights" at the expense of the rights of children and the responsibilities of parents
670: 385: 311: 134: 511: 322:
Lady Elizabeth Butler Sloss, President of the family division (the top UK family court judge), stated (in
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determinations, and campaign to change this. The fathers' rights movement is particularly strong in the
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are more effective tactics than performing publicity stunts. Research into effective means of changing
275: 727: 724: 718: 202: 709:
In 2003, 67,000 contact orders were granted and contact was refused in only 601 cases, less than 1%.
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The grievances of activists for fathers' rights typically stem from a perception that family court
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Fathers' rights advocates have achieved some limited political success; for example, the ideas of
590: 518: 480: 303:
their own children, thus indicating that it may be less safe to leave children with the mother.
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syndrome (as opposed to a set of behavioiurs) called Parental Alienation Syndrome is disputed:
684: 675: 381: 513:, the family justice minister, announced at the beginning of April 2004 that there would be a 491:, it remains to be seen whether attempting to influence legislation and providing evidence to 688: 472: 160: 601:, and highlighted what he saw as injustices in the treatment of men in his weekly column in 598: 363:
children before the split, as well as on how much involvement he is able to have in future.
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Fathers' rights activists believe that the current adversarial family court system, dubbed
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outlining proposals intended to improve the methods used to settle child custody disputes
352: 8: 488: 221: 66: 224: 749: 581:
Supporters of the fathers' rights movement include divorced (and subsequently widowed)
220:, including their father. Longitudinal studies, such as those done by Dr Eirini Flouri 17: 641:
the seeming denial of the extent and impact of domestic violence on women and children
765: 617: 484: 251: 217: 155: 760: 371:
Fathers' rights activists have a number of criticisms of the family court process:
695: 542: 492: 315: 239: 573:, Representative Ball successfully worked to pass the 1998 Visitation Reform Act. 476: 602: 496: 487:. Although the 2005 Children and Contact Bill addresses some of the concerns of 446: 332:
recognised syndrome requiring mental health professionals to play an expert role.
271: 606: 62: 38: 705: 594: 74: 54: 46: 713: 689:
Denial of the extent and impact of domestic violence on women and children
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Fathers' rights campaigners consistently point to the higher rate of
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In the US, some of the major fathers' rights organisations include:
78: 58: 651: 423: 41:
who believe that fathers are discriminated against by the courts in
582: 187: 593:. Waters fought a legal case for access to the daughter he had by 753: 432:
amongst fathers who are forcibly separated from their children.
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children, whilst the father has contact rights. Certainly, this
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Relationships that have ended as a result of actual or alleged
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marriages that end in divorce involve children. According to
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evidence that misuse of the legislation is rampant" and the
664: 613: 538: 524:. The November 2004 Queen's Speech before Parliament said: 198: 734: 622: 182:
discriminate against men in granting primary custody of a
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This motion was, however, defeated by 283 votes to 168.
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Contact and Domestic Violence: the Experts' Court Report
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Achievements of the fathers' rights movements in the US
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Achievements of the fathers' rights movements in the UK
356: 166:
The most prominent fathers' rights group in Ireland is
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that bias against fathers in family law does not exist
631:This concern is generally focused on four aspects: 274:
Bureau of Crime Statistics evaluation report of the
652:Bias against fathers in family law does not exist 424:The effect of separation from children on fathers 355:; there are even, as in at least one case in the 742: 483:to fathers when their name appears on a child's 435: 341:Contact, parenting time and shared residency 577:Supporters of the fathers' rights movement 324:Re L, V, M, H (Contact: Domestic Violence) 571:National Congress of Fathers and Children 173: 128:American Congress of Fathers and Children 121:National Congress of Fathers and Children 115:Alliance for Non-Custodial Parents Rights 105: 665:Intimidation of family law professionals 638:intimidation of family law professionals 282:is punishable in many countries, though 735:Fathers' rights versus childen's rights 623:Opposition to fathers' rights movements 151:In the UK, the best known groups are: 671:Spate of hoax bombs hits family courts 367:Criticisms of the family court process 306: 16:I'm working on the horrid POV article 754:Emphasis on the "traditional" family 729:There are further examples of this. 479:regarding the automatic granting of 245: 13: 605:. In the UK, the Home Secretary, 569:. Working in conjunction with the 380:rule that prohibits any reporting 14: 775: 589:and Irish writer and journalist 405:RE K (Contact: Mother's Anxiety) 477:Adoption and Children Act 2002 1: 743:Criticism of shared parenting 436:Support for estranged fathers 312:Parental Alienation Syndrome 242:would reflect these trends. 92:Americans for Divorce Reform 7: 10: 780: 276:apprehended violence order 210: 84: 135:Children's Rights Council 481:parental responsibility 567:Parents Without Rights 475:were included in the 186:or separated couple's 174:Main beliefs and goals 141:Parents Without Rights 106:Fathers' rights groups 473:Families Need Fathers 161:Families Need Fathers 293:provided it was safe 228:University of Oxford 223:and Dr Ann Buchanan 33:movement is a loose 489:Fathers For Justice 326:2 FLR 334 at 351): 307:Parental alienation 264:Sturge & Glaser 67:Republic of Ireland 609:'s resignation on 548:. The motion was: 218:significant others 146:Million Dads March 493:Select Committees 485:birth certificate 466:Fathers 4 Justice 297:Dame Butler-Sloss 252:domestic violence 246:Domestic violence 156:Fathers 4 Justice 771: 543:House of Commons 522:2004 Green Paper 401:winner takes all 316:the Children Act 240:shared parenting 779: 778: 774: 773: 772: 770: 769: 768: 756: 745: 737: 691: 667: 654: 625: 603:The Irish Times 599:Sinéad O'Connor 579: 563: 497:environment law 455: 447:contact centres 438: 426: 369: 343: 309: 272:New South Wales 248: 213: 176: 108: 87: 45:issues such as 39:interest groups 31:fathers' rights 25:Fathers' rights 18:fathers' rights 12: 11: 5: 777: 755: 752: 744: 741: 736: 733: 690: 687: 666: 663: 653: 650: 649: 648: 645: 642: 639: 636: 624: 621: 607:David Blunkett 578: 575: 562: 559: 555: 554: 532: 531: 454: 451: 437: 434: 425: 422: 421: 420: 415: 414: 396: 395: 390: 389: 368: 365: 342: 339: 335: 334: 308: 305: 247: 244: 212: 209: 175: 172: 164: 163: 158: 149: 148: 143: 138: 131: 124: 118: 107: 104: 86: 83: 63:United Kingdom 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 776: 767: 766: 762: 761: 751: 750: 740: 732: 731: 728: 725: 720: 719: 715: 711: 707: 706: 702: 697: 696: 686: 685: 681: 680: 676: 672: 662: 659: 646: 643: 640: 637: 634: 633: 632: 629: 620: 618: 615: 612: 608: 604: 600: 596: 592: 588: 584: 574: 572: 568: 558: 551: 550: 549: 547: 544: 540: 537: 530: 527: 526: 525: 523: 519: 516: 512: 510: 504: 502: 498: 494: 490: 486: 482: 478: 474: 469: 467: 462: 460: 450: 448: 442: 433: 431: 417: 416: 411: 406: 402: 398: 397: 392: 391: 387: 382: 379: 374: 373: 372: 364: 360: 358: 354: 349: 338: 333: 329: 328: 327: 325: 320: 317: 313: 304: 300: 298: 294: 288: 285: 281: 277: 273: 267: 265: 261: 255: 253: 243: 241: 237: 231: 229: 225: 222: 219: 208: 205: 203: 200: 197: 191: 189: 185: 181: 171: 169: 162: 159: 157: 154: 153: 152: 147: 144: 142: 139: 136: 132: 129: 125: 122: 119: 116: 113: 112: 111: 103: 99: 95: 93: 82: 80: 76: 75:United States 72: 68: 64: 60: 56: 55:child support 52: 48: 47:child custody 44: 40: 36: 32: 27: 26: 22: 19: 763: 757: 746: 738: 721: 714:The Guardian 708: 698: 692: 682: 668: 655: 630: 626: 580: 564: 556: 533: 528: 505: 470: 463: 456: 443: 439: 427: 404: 400: 370: 361: 347: 344: 336: 330: 323: 321: 310: 301: 292: 289: 268: 259: 256: 249: 232: 214: 206: 192: 177: 165: 150: 109: 100: 96: 88: 30: 28: 24: 23: 15: 611:15 December 591:John Waters 536:13 December 515:green paper 509:Lord Filkin 587:Bob Geldof 410:aggression 386:family law 353:D v D case 43:family law 585:founder, 378:in camera 79:Australia 59:paternity 583:Live Aid 188:children 184:divorced 541:in the 520:. See 430:suicide 388:system. 348:contact 284:perjury 280:perjury 226:at the 211:Custody 196:2 March 117:(ANCPR) 85:History 51:divorce 35:network 236:sexist 180:judges 130:(ACFC) 123:(NCFC) 81:. 73:, the 65:, the 57:, and 49:after 597:star 413:care. 168:A-men 137:(CRC) 71:Italy 614:2004 595:rock 539:2004 204:. 199:2005 133:The 126:The 77:and 29:The 712:As 501:F4J 459:FNF 262:by 170:. 37:of 545:. 357:US 69:, 53:,

Index

fathers' rights
network
interest groups
family law
child custody
divorce
child support
paternity
United Kingdom
Republic of Ireland
Italy
United States
Australia
Americans for Divorce Reform
Alliance for Non-Custodial Parents Rights
National Congress of Fathers and Children
American Congress of Fathers and Children
Children's Rights Council
Parents Without Rights
Million Dads March
Fathers 4 Justice
Families Need Fathers
A-men
judges
divorced
children
2 March
2005

significant others

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