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LocalGov co uk - Your authority on UK local government - Professionals back use of standalone supervision orders
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Professionals support calls for Care Review to examine supervision orders
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By Monidipa Fouzder2021-02-10T10:26:00+00:00
Separated parents turning to the family courts in England are more likely to live in the country’s most deprived areas, according to research into private family law which also highlights a north-south divide.
According to a study by The Nuffield Family Justice Observatory, published this week, the majority of private law applications were made by applicants living in the most deprived areas. In 2019/20, 30% of applicants lived in areas in the most deprived quintile; 13% lived in areas in the least deprived quintile.
Calculating total private family law applications per 10,000 families with dependent children for the nine English regions, application rates were consistently highest in the north east, north west and Yorkshire and the Humber regions (between 79 and 81 per 10,000 families), and consistently lowest in London (59 per 10,000) and the south east (44 per 10,000).
Should virtual child protection conferences become the new normal?
Professionals believe there will be no return to face-to-face conferences post-Covid, but research identifies serious concerns about the impact of virtual meetings on parents, says Lisa Harker
Picture posed by models (Credit: fizkes/Adobe Stock)
By Lisa Harker, director, Nuffield Family Justice Observatory
2020 has necessarily required online interactions to replace face-to-face throughout much of society, including children’s services.
But while turning to virtual or remote formats as a stand-in for usual practice has been a solution to the challenges of social distancing – and preferable to halting services altogether – it is vital that authorities continually assess how changes are affecting all those experiencing the system. And that clear evidence of what works and what doesn’t is gathered and considered before ‘pandemic practice’ slips into becoming business as usual.
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