1st Edition

Children & the Law Shaping the Modern Welfare Principle in the British Isles

By Kerry O'Halloran Copyright 2023
    310 Pages
    by Routledge

    310 Pages
    by Routledge

    Balancing a child’s welfare interests and rights so as to ensure recognition and respect for his or her autonomous identity, while facilitating family unity, has become a major challenge for modern family law. This book, following on from The Principle of the Welfare of the Child: A History, examines, contrasts, and compares the response of England and Wales and Ireland to that challenge. It does so by applying the same matrix of indicators to explore, in each country, the distinction between welfare interests and rights and to trace changes in the balance between them. By profiling the nations in accordance with the same indicators, it reveals important jurisdictional differences in the extent to which welfare interests or rights determine how the law is currently applied to children.

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction

    PART I

    Moving away from a traditional interpretation of welfare

    1 Children: Their welfare interests and the law

    2 Advocates for change

    PART II

    Shaping the modern welfare principle

    3 Domestic influences

    4 International influences

    PART III

    Profiling contemporary jurisdictional experiences of welfare

    5 England and Wales

    6 Ireland

    PART IV

    Jurisdictional analysis of a child’s welfare/rights: A thematic approach

    7 Themes and a comparative jurisdictional analysis

    Conclusion

    Selected Bibliography

    Index

     

    Biography

    Kerry O’Halloran, recently retired, has for 13 years been Adjunct Professor at the Australian Centre for Philanthropy and Nonprofit Studies, QUT, Australia.