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[and others] for the Cambridge Socio-Legal Group 205 $a1st ed. 210 1$aOxford ;$aPortland, Oregon :$cHart Publishing,$d2003. 215 $a1 online resource (430 p.) 300 $a"This collection of essays is the product of the third seminar series held by the Cambridge Socio-Legal Group in 2002."--Preface. 311 $a1-84113-253-5 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 327 $tIntroduction -- $rLiz Trinder --$tContact and children's perspectives on parental relationships -- $rJudy Dunn --$tMaking and breaking relationships: children and their families --$tChildren's contact with relatives -- $rJan Pryor --$tContact as a right and obligation -- $rAndrew Bainham --$tConnecting contact: contact in a private law context -- $rJonathan Herring --$tSupporting cross-household parenting: ideas about 'the family', policy formation and service development across jurisdictions -- $rMavis Maclean and Katrin Mueller-Johnson --$tSquaring the circle-the social, legal and welfare organisation of contact -- $rAdrian James --$tContact: mothers, welfare and rights -- $rShelley Day Sclater and Felicity Kaganas --$tReal love that dare not speak its name -- $rBob Geldof --$tFathers after divorce -- $rBob Simpson, Julie Jessop and Peter McCarthy --$tContact for children subject to state intervention -- $rJo Miles and Bridget Lindley --$tContact and the adoption reform -- $rJohn Eekelaar --$tAdoption and contact: a research review -- $rElsbeth Neil --$tAssisted reporduction and parental relationships -- $rMartin Richards --$tContact in containment -- $rBelinda Brooks-Gordon --$tMaking contact work in international cases: promoting contact whilst preventing international parental child abduction -- $rDonna Smith --$tDisputed contact cases in the courts -- $rAnn Buchanan and Joan Hunt --$tWorking and not working contact after divorce -- $rLiz Trinder. 330 8 $aThis book is concerned with the regulation of family relationships,in particular the issue of openness and contact in the many different family situations in which it may arise. 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