Description |
xiv, 158 pages : illustrations ; 30 cm |
Summary |
This report investigates the implications of the 2006 family law reforms on shared care parenting after separation - in particular the circumstances under which shared care arrangements work, or do not work, in the best interests of the child. The report draws upon a range of information, including a survey of over 1,000 separated parents, a survey with 136 children from separated families, case studies, and data from longitudinal studies and statistical surveys. The report examines the prevalence and duration of shared care, family characteristics, child wellbeing, parental satisfaction, and whether shared care benefits children |
Notes |
"May 2010" |
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Research commissioned by the Attorney-General's Department. Undertaken by the Social Policy Research Centre in conjunction with the Australian Institute of Family Studies and the University of Sydney Law School |
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Authors from the suggested citation: J Cashmore, P Parkinson, R Weston, R Patulny, G Redmond, L Qu, J Baxter, M Rajkovic, T Sitek and I Katz |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 155-158) |
Notes |
Also available in PDF and Word versions via the internet |
Subject |
Growing Up in Australia, the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children
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Caring for Children After Parental Separation Study
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HILDA Survey
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Joint custody of children -- Australia.
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Parenting, Part-time -- Australia.
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Children of divorced parents -- Australia.
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Author |
Cashmore, Judy.
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Parkinson, Patrick.
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Weston, Ruth
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Patulny, Roger.
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Redmond, Gerry.
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Qu, Lixia.
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Baxter, Jennifer
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Rajkovic, Marianne
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Sitek, Tomasz
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Katz, Ilan.
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University of New South Wales. Social Policy Research Centre.
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Australian Institute of Family Studies.
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University of Sydney. Faculty of Law.
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Australia. Attorney-General's Department.
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ISBN |
9781921725197 |
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