Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Your Family

The NSPCC website Your Family has produced some tips on how parents can help their children to deal with divorce.

Say “I love you”
Tell children how much you love them. It sounds obvious but kids of all ages need extra reassurance if they feel their family is falling apart, and that they will be separated from loved ones

Listen up
Listen to your kids and comfort them if they are upset or worried. When you are caught up in your own worries, it can be easy to forget the feelings of those around you

Keep talking
Reinforce the fact that the split is not their fault

Be honest
While children do not need to be involved in every detail of a divorce, it’s important to be as honest as possible about what happened and what’s going to happen while giving as much reassurance as possible

Keep a routine
Try and keep the day-to-day schedule as normal as possible. Introduce any changes slowly and talk them through with your children

Family time
Make sure both parents have as much time as is practical to spend with the children, unless there are obvious reasons why this would be dangerous — such as a partner with drink or drug problems

Home sweet home
If your children come to visit you in your new home, make sure there are some familiar items there such as toys or posters for the bedroom. This will help them to see that you are still a big part of their lives.

Share the load
When appropriate, try and share out the childcare responsibilities between both you and your partner, so your kids can see that both parents are still very involved in family life

Keep some things to yourself
Don’t criticise your partner in front of the children or alienate them from him/her. Whatever has happened between you two, your children will still love both parents equally

Phone a friend
Find someone you trust to talk to about what’s happening in your life. It makes things harder if you bottle up the hurt, and having a friend to talk to means you are less likely to let off steam in front of the children

Remember the little things
Children may be very worried about things that don't seem important to you, like what is going to happen to their pet or whether they will see their friends. You need to remember that these things are important to your kids

Get a second opinion
Children often find it difficult to express their feelings, especially younger kids. Look for signs in your children’s behaviour to keep track of how they are dealing with the split. Ask friends, families and teachers to keep an eye on their behaviour too. Remember that when you are dealing with your own feelings of grief, it can be hard to spot the signs that your children may be giving out, which might not be obvious.

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Monday, January 12, 2009

Busy Lawyers

January is said to be a busy time for family lawyers with divorces peaking after the Christmas break and last week The Herald reported that this year the credit crunch is expected to be a contributory factor in setting new highs in Scotland. What the papers don't report is the Christmas Contact orders that have gone wrong, a subject Lucy Reed of Pink Tape touches on in this post.

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Instability & Attachments

I've been reading the excellent Family Affair blog of Jay Belsky, Director of the Institute for the Study of Children, Families and Social Issues and Professor of Psychology at Birkbeck University of London, for sometime and his post The Timing of Family Instability persuaded me it was appropriate to add the blog to my blogroll. In his post Jay Belsky considers research into the timing of changes in family structures. it was found there is a 'sleeper' effect of early family instability that isn't apparent early in life, but results in children developing less well across the primary school years.

In his latest blog, Attachment Security: Born or Made? Jay looks at the extent that secure childhood attachments are influenced by the care given and genetics. The scientific explanation is worth a read but it seems to support the notion we all vary in our susceptibility to environmental influences.

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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Review 2008


The last three weeks I've been busy with the seasonal festivities, daughter visiting from Australia, son's birthday and I even managed to get away for a short break. I've only just got around to reflecting events of the past year.

January My very first blog ever setting out a wish list and there have been some moves in the right direction. C-MEC came into operation this year although it remains yet to be seen how effective the change over from the Child Support Agency will be. Relationships Scotland was formed from Relate Scotland and Family Mediation Scotland and with the support of the Scottish Collaborative Law Group pilots of parenting classes were initiated throughout Scotland.


February The first of three damning regional Ofsted inspection reports into the Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service, the organisation that provides a social work service to children and families who are involved in family court proceedings in England & Wales.


March The Court of Session ordered three children to be returned to their mother in France. Subsequently the father was extradited to face charges of child abduction.

April The Glasgow Bar Association voted for industrial action in protest against the Scottish Government's plans to reform legal aid. Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill was to announce an increase in the level of civil legal aid payments and a new scale of payments for complex family law cases a month later.

May The launch in Edinburgh of Scotland's first specialist legal service, Cl@n, for children and young people who need legal advice and representation.


June In SS v Childen's Reporter Sheriff Stoddart ruled that an interim contact order did not "vest" any parental rights and responsibilities in the father, but did relate to the exercise of such rights. the case sent back to the children's hearing to reconsider.


July Sheriff Nigel Murray Paton Morrison set out a list of factors to consider in cases when permission to remove a child from the jurisdiction permanently is sought.


August Thousands of drivers, including holidaymakers on their way to Heathrow, were left stranded after police were forced to shut part of the M25 when Fathers 4 Justice campaigner, Geoffrey Hibbert, dressed as Batman and climbed on to a gantry. In September Fathers 4 justice was disbanded and then relaunched??

September In Scotland's first 'palimony' case a mother was awarded £14,460 representing a half share of a tax bill and a half share of the estimated £26,000 to cover childcare.

RAB v MIB overturned decisions by sheriffs in Aberdeen and an English Court that the child residency case should be heard in English courts.

Nigel Don tabled a motion, Family Law Disputes, in the Scottish Parliament.

That the Parliament recognises that current arrangements for settling family law disputes could be improved and that current law still discriminates against parents who are not married; notes that parents can find it difficult or impossible to enforce contact orders where the other parent is unco-operative and that disputes where broken families live in more than one jurisdiction within the United Kingdom are unnecessarily difficult to resolve; further notes that these issues are particularly relevant due to recent cases in the north east; encourages current moves by Scotland's legal profession towards collaborative dispute resolution, and notes with interest the new system of less adversarial trials being developed in Australia.


October Launch of the Scottish Legal Complaints Commission.

November Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill announced the upper disposable income threshold for civil legal aid is to increase from £10,306 to £25,000.

December New measures for the enforcement of child contact orders introduced in England& Wales.

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Monday, January 5, 2009

Happy New Year

A rather belated Happy New Year to everyone after a rather longer than planned break.

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