|
Showing 1 - 1 of
1 matches in All Departments
There has been much discussion worldwide on parenting after
parental separation, especially on the desirability for the
children involved of equally shared care (co-parenting) and the
feasibility of legal arrangements in which the children alternate
their residence between their parents' houses (residential
co-parenting). Much is unclear about how residential co-parenting
affects children and therefore how the legislator and practitioners
should deal with this arrangement.Divided Parents, Shared Children
seeks to answer three questions to further understand the
phenomenon of co-parenting and to provide the legislator, the
courts and parents with possible solutions: What kind of legal
framework exists in England and Wales, the Netherlands and Belgium
with regard to (residential) co-parenting and what can these
countries learn from each other's legal systems? Does residential
co-parenting occur in the countries discussed, and if so how
predominant is it? Should these jurisdictions encourage or
discourage residential co-parenting through legal action? To answer
these questions, this book uses not only legal data, from both
empirical and literature research, but also sociological,
psychological and demographic studies into residential arrangements
and their effect on children.
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.