Joint parenting must stay: men’s rights group
Posted by Caroline Overington on January 31st, 2010 | Category: Caroline Overington federal Attorney-General Robert McClelland Family Law Reform
MEN'S rights groups will fight any planned rollback of the shared parenting laws, saying reports released yesterday prove an overwhelming majority of Australians support the right of children to know both their parents after divorce.
- Caroline Overington
- From: The Australian
- January 29, 2010
It also found an increase in the number of parents willing to settle custody arrangements outside the court system, and it found children and parents were happy with shared care.
Shared care doesn't mean a 50-50 time split, but it does mean the child spends "substantial time" with each parent.
The review, which took two years and involved 28,000 people, including 15,000 parents, found conflict between parents led to "worse outcomes" for children who lived in shared-care arrangements. But for most people it worked well.
Shared care advocate Michael Green QC said the report was "terrific".
"It shows 80 per cent of parents are co-operating, sorting things out for themselves." He said the report made it clear "no change to the law is necessary".
The AIFS report was one of three into family law released yesterday, and it made no recommendations, with the authors saying they were not asked to provide any.
Another report, by retired Family Court judge Richard Chisholm, recommends several changes to the law, saying judges needed to be able to decide each case on its merits.
Executive director of the Shared Parenting Council, Edward Dabrowski, said his organisation would resist any law change that would wind back the concept of shared parenting.
Comments (0)
