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Article

Manipulation and Domestic Abuse in Contested Contact - Threats to Children's Participation Rights

Details

Citation

Morrison F, Tisdall EKM & Callaghan JEM (2020) Manipulation and Domestic Abuse in Contested Contact - Threats to Children's Participation Rights. Family Court Review, 58 (2), pp. 403-416. https://doi.org/10.1111/fcre.12479

Abstract
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child has catalysed numerous jurisdictions to introduce new legal provisions to support children¡¯s participation rights when child contact is contested. Despite this, children¡¯s participation is frequently limited in practice, especially in contexts where children are perceived as vulnerable to a parent¡¯s manipulation, even if there are allegations of domestic abuse. While ¡®resist and refusal dynamics¡¯ have yet to become mainstream terms in Scottish family law, ¡®manipulation¡¯ has become a common concern in cases of contested contact. Drawing on a Scottish empirical study on contested child contact in circumstances of domestic abuse, we interrogate the implications that the concept of manipulation has for children¡¯s participation rights. The study involved separate in-depth interviews with 18 children and their 16 mothers. Findings point to concerns about upholding children¡¯s participation rights, particularly in cases where children were depicted as ¡°influenced¡± or ¡°manipulated.¡± Through our analysis, we disentangle the problems professionals have when concerns about child manipulation and domestic abuse intersect. We argue that, when combined, allegations of manipulation and domestic abuse present a significant and serious risk to children¡¯s participation rights. We find the legal construction of the child¡¯s views as separate from the parental dispute to have unintended and serious consequences for children¡¯s participation rights. We offer ways in which law and practice may evolve to ensure children¡¯s participation rights in these contexts are both implemented and upheld.

Keywords
Child rights; participation; manipulation; alienation; domestic abuse; child contact; visitation; family law

Journal
Family Court Review: Volume 58, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date30/04/2020
Publication date online28/04/2020
Date accepted by journal29/02/2020
URL
ISSN1531-2445
eISSN1744-1617

People (1)

Professor Jane Callaghan

Professor Jane Callaghan

Director Child Wellbeing & Protection, Social Work

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