EUROPEAN HUMAN RIGHTS AND FAMILY LAW.
This book examines the
potential impact of human rights in the way the law interacts with families.
Traditionally family law has been dominated by consequentialist/utilitarian
themes. The most notable example of this occurs in the law relating to children
and the employment of the 'welfare principle'.
This requires the court to focus on the welfare of the child
as the paramount consideration. Hitherto the courts and, to a certain extent,
family law academics, have firmly rejected the use of the language of rights,
preferring the discretion and child-centred focus of welfare. However, the
incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights via the Human Rights
Act now requires family law to deal more clearly with the competing rights that
family members can hold.
In addition, it is clear that, to date, the courts have
largely ignored or minimized the different demands that the HRA imposes on the
judiciary and, in particular, judicial reasoning. This book challenges that view
and suggests ways in which the family courts may improve their reasoning in this
field. No longer can cases be dealt with on the basis of a simple utilitarian
calculation of what is in the best interests of the child and other family
members - greater transparency is required.
The book clarifies the different rights that family members
can hold and, in particular, identifies ways in which it may be possible to deal
with the clash of rights between family members that will inevitably occur.
Whether this requires an abandonment of the utilitarian nature of family law, or
a reworking of it, is a theme that runs throughout the book.