Article

Manipulation and Domestic Abuse in Contested Contact - Threats to Children's Participation Rights

Details

Citation

Morrison F, Tisdall EKM & Callaghan JEM (2020) Manipulation and Domestic Abuse in Contested Contact - Threats to Children's Participation Rights. Family Court Review, 58 (2), pp. 403-416. https://doi.org/10.1111/fcre.12479

Abstract
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child has catalysed numerous jurisdictions to introduce new legal provisions to support children’s participation rights when child contact is contested. Despite this, children’s participation is frequently limited in practice, especially in contexts where children are perceived as vulnerable to a parent’s manipulation, even if there are allegations of domestic abuse. While ‘resist and refusal dynamics’ have yet to become mainstream terms in Scottish family law, ‘manipulation’ has become a common concern in cases of contested contact. Drawing on a Scottish empirical study on contested child contact in circumstances of domestic abuse, we interrogate the implications that the concept of manipulation has for children’s participation rights. The study involved separate in-depth interviews with 18 children and their 16 mothers. Findings point to concerns about upholding children’s participation rights, particularly in cases where children were depicted as “influenced” or “manipulated.” Through our analysis, we disentangle the problems professionals have when concerns about child manipulation and domestic abuse intersect. We argue that, when combined, allegations of manipulation and domestic abuse present a significant and serious risk to children’s participation rights. We find the legal construction of the child’s views as separate from the parental dispute to have unintended and serious consequences for children’s participation rights. We offer ways in which law and practice may evolve to ensure children’s participation rights in these contexts are both implemented and upheld.

Keywords
Child rights; participation; manipulation; alienation; domestic abuse; child contact; visitation; family law

Journal
Family Court Review: Volume 58, Issue 2

StatusPublished
FundersEconomic and Social Research Council
Publication date30/04/2020
Publication date online28/04/2020
Date accepted by journal29/02/2020
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/31160
ISSN1531-2445
eISSN1744-1617

People (1)

People

Professor Jane Callaghan

Professor Jane Callaghan

Director Child Wellbeing & Protection, Social Work