doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200005794

Article type: Original Research

PUBLISHED 1 January 2003

Volume 28 Issue 4

The silent minority: The voice of the child in family law

Amanda Shea Hart

name here
Amanda Shea Hart1

Affiliations

1 Adelaide, asheahart@centacare.org.au

Contributions

Amanda Shea Hart -

CITATION: Hart A.S. (2003). The silent minority: The voice of the child in family law. Children Australia, 28(4), 1469. doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200005794

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Abstract

Family law in Australia is an important and unique jurisdiction that directly impacts upon the well-being and future family relationships of children whose families are in dispute over post separation parenting arrangements. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child states that children have the right to participate in decisions that directly affect them. But there are many barriers and tensions to children's participation in the jurisdiction of family law in Australia. Decisions said to be in the child's ‘best interests’ are influenced by value judgments and beliefs that are informed by dominant western discourses on the needs and competencies of children. In practice under the Family Law Reform Act 1995 children remain marginalised without an effective voice. Failure to hear the voice of the child is of special concern for children who have been traumatised by exposure to family violence and ongoing conflict. It is important to develop new understandings about children and the importance of giving children a voice.

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