1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910795321503321

Autore

Laing Alexander

Titolo

Public children law : contemporary issues / / Alexander Laing and Bianca Jackson

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Haywards Heath : , : Bloomsbury Professional, , 2018

ISBN

1-5265-0328-X

1-5265-0330-1

1-5265-0329-8

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (277 pages)

Collana

Bloomsbury family law

Disciplina

346.420135

Soggetti

Domestic relations courts - Great Britain

Domestic relations - Great Britain

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Includes index.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Chapter 1: Section 20, Children Act 1989 -- Chapter 2: Threshold: Sections 31 and 38, Children Act 1989 -- Chapter 3: Public Law Orders and Foreign Nationals -- Chapter 4: Children's Evidence: Court Evidence and ABEs -- Chapter 5: Female Genital Mutilation, Forced Marriage and Honour-Based Violence -- Chapter 6: Child Trafficking -- Chapter 7: Radicalisation -- Chapter 8: Reporting Restrictions -- Chapter 9: Secure Accommodation: Section 25, Children Act 1989 and the Inherent Jurisdiction -- Chapter 10: Special Guardianship Orders -- Chapter 11: Post-adoption Contact -- Chapter 12: The Family Drug and Alcohol Court (FDAC)

Sommario/riassunto

"Public children law is at the sharp end of our legal system, where some of the most difficult social and legal issues are considered. As the vehicle through which the State seeks to safeguard the most vulnerable of children, it interferes profoundly with the lives of individuals and families across England and Wales. Yet it must protect the rights of all individuals involved in the process. Its scope must contemplate the most needy - from those with physical, mental and learning disabilities to those suffering from addiction - and therefore its apparatus is complex and often misunderstood. Legal practitioners, social care professionals, children's guardians and members of the judiciary are



pressed by circumstances to deal with these most difficult and unpredictable cases as a matter of urgency. For that reason, maintaining good practice can be a constant challenge. The proliferation of reported judgments and sharp rise in applications for public law orders place considerable pressures on all of those involved in public children law. That is made harder still by the recent rise in cases with an international dimension and the proliferation of different jurisdictional schemes that now apply. Those involved must constantly strive to stay on top of case law, procedural rules, and evolving statutes and regulations in order to be able to execute their responsibilities effectively and safeguard the best interests of the child. Public Children Law: Contemporary Issues is a guide to important, current and commonly misunderstood issues in public children law focusing on areas that have posed particular difficulties for practitioners in recent years. It: synthesises, in one place, the myriad sources of law in England and Wales sets out, simply and clearly, the key cases and procedure in relation to 12 themes central to contemporary public children law; and assists with good practice pointing out common pitfalls and how to avoid them. Each chapter functions as a stand-alone guide to an important, current and commonly misunderstood theme in public children law and provides an introduction to the relevant law, a discussion of the key principles, and a guide to good and bad practice. Where appropriate, it offers practical tips, flow charts, and guides to sound drafting of legal documents, including legal orders. The book starts from pre-proceedings, analyses the commencement of care proceedings, takes in pressing and contemporary issues that are increasingly common to such cases, and examines the current changes in emphasis in children law. Whilst the book examines complex legal concepts, with reference to specific case law and statutory instruments, it is accessible to a variety of audiences and provides contemporary analysis of many of the topics that the family court has grappled with in recent years."--Bloomsbury Publishing.