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The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child is acknowledged as a
landmark in the development of children's rights. Article 3 makes
the child's best interests a primary consideration in all actions
concerning children and requires States Parties to ensure their
care and protection. This volume, written by experts in children's
rights from a range of jurisdictions, explores the implementation
of Article 3 around the world. It opens with a contextual analysis
of Article 3, before offering a critique of its implementation in
various settings, including parenting, religion, domestic violence
and baby switching. Amongst the themes that emerge are the
challenges posed by the content of 'best interests', 'welfare' and
'well-being'; the priority to be accorded them; and the legal,
socioeconomic and other obstacles to legislating for children's
rights. This book is essential for all readers who interact with
one of the Convention's most fundamental principles.
Child and family law tells us much about how a society operates,
since it touches the lives of everyone living in that society. In
this volume, a variety of experts examine child and family law in
thirteen countries - Australia, Canada, China, India, Israel,
Malaysia, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Russia, Scotland,
South Africa and the United States. Each chapter identifies the
imperatives and influences that have prevailed to date and offers
informed predictions of how it will develop in the years to come. A
common chapter structure facilitates comparison of the
jurisdictions, and in the introduction the editor highlights common
trends and salient differences. The Future of Child and Family Law
therefore provides practitioners, academics and policy-makers with
access not just to an overview of child and family law in a range
of countries around the world, but also to insights into what has
shaped it and options for reform.
Child and family law tells us much about how a society operates,
since it touches the lives of everyone living in that society. In
this volume, a variety of experts examine child and family law in
thirteen countries Australia, Canada, China, India, Israel,
Malaysia, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Russia, Scotland,
South Africa and the United States. Each chapter identifies the
imperatives and influences that have prevailed to date and offers
informed predictions of how it will develop in the years to come. A
common chapter structure facilitates comparison of the
jurisdictions and, in the introduction, the editor highlights
common trends and salient differences. The Future of Child and
Family Law therefore provides practitioners, academics and
policy-makers with access not just to an overview of child and
family law in a range of countries around the world, but also to
insights into what has shaped it and options for reform."
The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child is acknowledged as a
landmark in the development of children's rights. Article 3 makes
the child's best interests a primary consideration in all actions
concerning children and requires States Parties to ensure their
care and protection. This volume, written by experts in children's
rights from a range of jurisdictions, explores the implementation
of Article 3 around the world. It opens with a contextual analysis
of Article 3, before offering a critique of its implementation in
various settings, including parenting, religion, domestic violence
and baby switching. Amongst the themes that emerge are the
challenges posed by the content of 'best interests', 'welfare' and
'well-being'; the priority to be accorded them; and the legal,
socioeconomic and other obstacles to legislating for children's
rights. This book is essential for all readers who interact with
one of the Convention's most fundamental principles.
Law Making and The Scottish Parliament: The Early Years offers the
first wide-ranging critical analysis of legislative developments in
those areas of law and policy devolved to the Scottish Parliament
under the devolution settlement. It begins with a brief account of
the devolution settlement and summarises the themes emerging from
the subsequent chapters. Thereafter, sixteen themed chapters, each
dedicated to a discrete area of the law and written by an
acknowledged expert in the field, provide critical evaluation of
the Scottish Parliament's contribution, highlighting what it has
achieved, what it has failed to do and what might be done in the
future. In a single volume, Law Making and The Scottish Parliament:
The Early Years provides a scholarly evaluation of a number of
legislative achievements of Scotland's devolved parliament in its
first decade. It will appeal to legal and other scholars and
students, lawyers and anyone with an interest in Scottish politics,
policy-making and law.
Law Making and The Scottish Parliament: The Early Years offers the
first wide-ranging critical analysis of legislative developments in
those areas of law and policy devolved to the Scottish Parliament
under the devolution settlement. It begins with a brief account of
the devolution settlement and summarises the themes emerging from
the subsequent chapters. Thereafter, sixteen themed chapters, each
dedicated to a discrete area of the law and written by an
acknowledged expert in the field, provide critical evaluation of
the Scottish Parliament's contribution, highlighting what it has
achieved, what it has failed to do and what might be done in the
future. In a single volume, Law Making and The Scottish Parliament:
The Early Years provides a scholarly evaluation of a number of key
legislative achievements of Scotland's devolved parliament in its
first decade. It will appeal to legal and other scholars and
students, lawyers and anyone with an interest in Scottish politics,
policy-making and law.
From the huge miscarriage of justice against Oscar Slater to the
Lockerbie trial; from the decomposing snail in bottle of ginger
beer to allegations of high jinks by a prominent politician; from
unplanned pregnancy to switching off life support; from McCaig's
folly at Oban to the lettering 'EIIR' on pillar boxes, and from St
Ninian's Treasure in Shetland to allegations of ritual child abuse
in Orkney, Scots Law Tales brings a number of leading cases from
the Scottish courts to life. Telling the stories behind some of the
most memorable cases from the 100 years, it captures the
personalities involved, the events leading up to the case, what the
court decided and why, and the role that the case played in the
development of its area of law.
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