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Public Affairs

Useful Links

A list of organisations who may be useful for FNF members. Should you wish to add to this resource, please send us an e-mail.

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z  

 

A:

 

ASP
Association of Shared Parenting

 

B:

 

Barnardos
Once a provider of orphanages, now funds research and projects for disadvantaged children

 

BAAM
British Association of Anger Management – UK centre of expertise for all aspects of anger and conflict management

 

C:

 

CAFCASS
The Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service

 

CEDR
Centre for Effective Dispute Resolution

 

The Centre for Separated Families
Working to bring better outcomes for children

Childline
A free helpline for children + young people in the UK 
 
 
Supports children across the country
 
 
Child Maintenance Options

 

Coram Children's Legal Centre

 

Counselling Directory
Information about counselling services, including a directory of qualified counsellors and psychotherapists across the country.



CRAE
Children’s Rights Alliance for England

 

The Custody Minefield
Provides Family Law Information for parents

 

E:

 

EHRC
Equality and Human Rights Commission

 

F:

 

Family Action
Provides services for disadvantaged and socially isolated families 

 

Family Lives
Provides help and support in all aspects of family life

 

Family and Parenting Institute 

 

Fatherhood Institute
A Fatherhood Think Tank

 

G:

 

GAG
Grandparents Action Group

 

Gingerbread
Provides advice and support for single parents

 

Grandparents Plus
Champions the vital role of grandparents and the wider family in children’s lives

 

GTL
Paternity testing company. With their Helping Hand fund, clients referred from FNF can receive up to a 75% discount. Email admin@fnf.org.uk for more details.

 

 

H:

 

HMCTS
Her Majesty’s Courts & Tribunals service

 

HOPE EDUCATION
Leading teaching resources supplier in UK with a vast range of anti-bullying and  PSHE/citizenship learning aids.

 

J:

 

JUMP
Jewish Unity for Multiple Parenting 

 

K:

 

Kids Come First
Separated parents group in the London area.

 

 

L:

 

LIFE Hounslow
Free and confidential support for unexpected pregnancy and pregnancy loss

 

M:

 

MATCH
Mothers Apart from their Children

ManKind Initiative
Support service for male victims of domestic violence

 

N:

 

NACCC
National Association of Child Contact Centres 


NACSA
National Association for Child Support Action 


NCB
National Children’s Bureau 

 

National Family Mediation
National mediation services and support


NSPCC
National Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children 


NYAS
National Youth Advocacy Service

 

O:

 

Only Dads
Small charity offering support and chat (mainly on line) for single fathers. 

Only Mums
Small charity offering support and chat (mainly on line) for single mothers.

 

ONS
Office of National Statistics

 

R:

 

RCJ
Royal Courts of Justice 

 

Relate
Charity providing relationship support


Resolution
The trade body of family solicitors

S:

  

Salisbury Child Contact Centre 
Charity Based in Salisbury providing a safe, friendly and neutral place where children of separated families can spend time with their non-resident parent.

 

Savannah Lodge Contact Centre 
Based in Bishops Stortford and providing supervised, suppored and community based contact.

 

SHARP
Support, Help and Advice for Relatives and friends of Prisoners 

 

SPIG
Shared Parenting Information Group 

 

SSAFA
Soldiers Sailors Airmen and Families Association

 

Storybook Dads
Enables parents in prison to record bedtime stories for their children

 

W:

 

 

Women's Aid
National organisation running refuges for female victims of domestic violence 

 

Wright Hassall Divorce Guide
A free guide to the divorce process for mums and dads.

 

Y:

 

Young Minds
National charity around Mental Health Issues for Young People

 

 

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McKenzie Audio Downloads

Please note that this section is under ongoing development to ensure best accessibility. If you have any suggestions for improvements, please e-mail editor@fnf.org.uk

 

The audio versions of McKenzie were prepared by the RNIB's Transcription Service. The audio is primarily for visually-impaired people and FNF is extremely grateful to the RNIB for allowing us to provide them here.

 

 

You can listen to McKenzie through your browser (just click), download for offline listening (Right click and 'save-as'), as a Podcast (see below) or through our embedded media player - just click on the box (above right) and follow the instructions.

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Books

FNF is proud to offer the following book which is available for purchase through our office.

For the Sake of the Children (2nd Edition)

FNF's guide to shared parenting

by Sue Secker

After family breakdown, reaching agreement about children can be difficult. It seems far more common for children to live with one parent, usually the mother, and some fathers subsequently face an unequal struggle to remain part of their children's lives.

This practical guide is based on the experiences of FNF members and their families. It will be of interest to anyone wanting to ensure children get the best of both parents' worlds after family breakdown. It provides invaluable information about the real issues that have to be faced, such as dealing sensitively with your ex-partner, coping with the various agencies who may become involved and getting to grips with the legal system and the courts.

Don't ever give up hope.

Delivery free to members - contact FNF for availability.


Recommended Titles:

Children Act Private Law Proceedings: A Handbook

by District Judge John Mitchell

Review the contents here

Access the knowledge to instruct your solicitor or conduct your own case.
This book, written for family lawyers, combines a thorough analysis of the law with a clear explanation of procedure from initial application to final hearing.
Recommended by FNF for Litigants in Person.

Children Act Private Law Proceedings: A Handbook

Available to order via Amazon


 

Contact: The New Deal

P. Pressdee, J. Vater, F. Judd QC and J. Baker QC

Compulsary reading for all those interested in family law and policy

Contact: The New Deal

Available to order via Amazon

Advocacy In Family Proceedings

David Bedingfield

David Bedingfield explores the skills and rules of good advocacy and applies them to the range of family proceedings: ancillary relief claims; private and public law Children Act cases; injunction applications; abduction and adoption cases; and appeal hearings. This practical text is enlivened by numerous examples and incorporates the collective wisdom of dozens of family law judges, and leading barristers and solicitors, interviewed in the course of the research.

Advocacy In Family Proceedings

Available to order via Amazon

 

Divorce Poison 

Dr Richard Warshak

The best book we’ve found which addresses parental alienation.  Don’t be put off by the American title, this is the required handbook for separating parents, far superior to the UK Ludwig Lowenstein book ‘Parental Alienation’.  Worthwhile reading for all separated parents with practical advice.  It will enable you to identify the warning signs and also to avoid inadvertently adopting some of the alienating behaviour yourself.  Your child needs you to read this book.

Divorce Poison

Available to order via Amazon

Lily and Ben's story books for children attending child contact centres

Ben's Story - Ben is frightened when his parents separate. How where and when can he see Dad again? This delightful and sensitive book is aimed at children who will be using a Contact Centre to see a family member, covering practical aspects of visiting a Centre and the feelings children may experience.
Lily's Story - Lily is very young when her Daddy suddenly disappears. Her behaviour deteriorates as she searches everywhere but cannot find him.This book can be used by fathers and mothers with their children, not only to explain about Child Contact Centres, but also as a starting point for talking together about the feelings that children have when parents separate.
The books can be ordered from the NACCC (National Association of Child Contact Centres) via this link.

 

 

Fathers Matter: A Guide to Contact After Divorce and Separation

Celia Conrad

Part 1 (about one third of the book) deals with ‘Family Matters’ – e.g. the importance of fathers, dealing with your ex and so on.  The remainder of the book is devoted to the law and court applications. The author was formerly a practising family law solicitor and she covers this thoroughly and accurately (unlike some books), packing in a great deal of information.  There are many ordinary books covering this area – this one is worthwhile.

Review the contents here

Fathers Matter: A Guide to Contact on Separation and Divorce

Available to order via Amazon

A Mother Apart - How to Let Go of Guilt and Find Happiness Living Apart From Your Child

Sarah Hart

Sarah Hart is a member and Special Adviser to Mothers Apart From Their Children (MATCH) - FNF's sister organisation. 

A Mother Apart: How to Let Go of Guilt and Find Happiness Living Apart from Your Child

Available to order via Amazon 

Divorce and Separation - The Essential Guide

Linda Jones

Faced with the reality that you are going to split with your partner, the last thing you need is the added worry of what to say to your children or how to answer their questions. This book is here to help. Its easy-to-read style covers the practical, emotional and physical impact of a separation, from breaking the news and organising living arrangements to dating and step-families. It pulls together a wealth of experiences and anecdotes from adults and children, as well as experts, counsellors and lawyers who can offer crucial advice. Whether you are a parent, grandparent, carer or teacher, this book will help you reduce and manage the pain and stress for children when a relationship ends. Forget the guilt trip. All any parent wants for their children is the best and that includes those parents who decide to go their separate ways.

Divorce and Separation - The Essential Guide

Available to order via Amazon

Divorce and Separation: a legal guide for all couples

Dr Mary Welstead

This is a brilliantly written, well-indexed, concise book (114 pp).  It covers practical, emotional and financial points, including a chapter on the children’s best interests. The ‘useful organisations’ list at the back is comprehensive.

It is essential introductory reading for people who are facing the breakdown of marriage, cohabitation or civil partnerships.

Divorce and Separation: a legal guide for all couples

Available to order via Amazon

 

Parental Alienation, DSM-5, and ICD-11

William Bernet, M.D.

The authors of this book believe that parental alienation is not simply a minor aberration in the life of a family, but a serious mental condition. Because of the false belief that the alienated parent is a dangerous or unworthy person, the child loses one of the most important relationships in his or her life. This book contains much information about the validity, reliability, and prevalence of parental alienation.It also includes a comprehensive international bibliography regarding parental alienation with more than 600 citations. In order to bring life to the definitions and the technical writing, several short clinical vignettes have been included. These vignettes are based on actual families and real events, but have been modified to protect the privacy of both the parents and children.

You can see reviews and purchase this book from Amazon.

If you purchase these publications from Amazon via the links above, FNF receives 5% of your order. Better still, the charity gets 5% of your total order anytime you buy items from Amazon if you enter their site by clicking here!

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What is Shared Parenting?

Shared parenting is when children are brought up with the love and guidance of both parents.

There is much discussion about how to describe the continued involvement of both parents in the lives of their children following separation or divorce. ‘Shared parenting’, 'equal parenting’, ‘involved parenting’, 'co-operative parenting’, ‘parallel parenting’ and others are used.

The term preferred by FNF is shared parenting.

Unlike some of the others, it makes explicit that both parents must share this role. Co-operation should be earnestly sought, and equality is a desirable long-term objective, but ‘shared parenting’ captures these features and more.

Members can find further information in our Factsheets and Guides, as well as in our public section on Shared Parenting Research.

What do we mean by 'shared parenting'?

Firstly, shared parenting goes wider than the time each parent spends with their child(ren). It must involve the child spending a significant proportion of their time with each parent. But it does not imply a stated or fixed proportion of parenting time being allocated to each parent, much less that the child’s time must be divided equally between the two parents in every case.

There must be a proportion of parenting time that is so low that parenting can scarcely be said to be 'shared'. One could argue this level. What seems to be the 'standard ration' that children are offered - a fortnightly visit to their non-resident parent, plus some time around holidays - cannot be said to be shared parenting. Nor can parents with so little parenting time be effectively involved in any decisions that need to be taken.

It is important to note that shared parenting does not imply a single time in a child’s life. It refers to a childhood-long parenting plan. The plan is reviewed periodically and adapted to fit a child’s emotional, scholastic and physical needs as they grow.

Our definition revolves around the objectives to be achieved.

 

These are as follows:

1) That the children feel that they have two properly involved parents.

2) That one parent is not able to dominate the lives of the children at the expense of the other or to control the other parent via the children.

3) That the parents have broadly equal 'moral authority' in the eyes of the children and that the children have free access to both their parents if there are issues affecting them.

4) That the children are able to share the lives of both their parents 'in the round' - for example not spending all 'routine time' with one parent and only 'leisure time' with the other.

5) That the parents are in a position of legal and moral equality, and are considered in this light by the children as well as friends, neighbours, teachers etc as well as public authorities, this would apply to routine as well as major matters.

6) That there is no part of the children's lives, for example their school life or having friends, that one parent is excluded from by virtue of the allocation of parenting time or the law on separation/divorce and children.

7) That the children are not by virtue of the allocation of parenting time excluded from any part of either parent's life.

8) That the children spend enough time with both parents to be able to negate any attempts at ‘parental alienation'.

9) That the children do not develop stereotyped ideas from their parents about the roles of the sexes, for example that a father’s role is chiefly financial and a ‘giver of treats’, and that mothers have responsibility for everything else.

How to apply these criteria to particular families will be a matter of discussion and negotiation, taking into account the individual needs and wishes of the children and parents, and the circumstances in question. As always, the needs of the child must be paramount.

How do I proceed in the necessary direction?

1) That week-end contact begins with picking up the child(ren) from school/nursery on Friday and continues to delivering them on Monday. This will increase equality of parenting time, allow sufficient time for real shared activities and bonding, allow contact between the parent currently known as the “Non Resident Parent” and the school plus other parents and their children (which are likely to be their own children's friends). In the event of concerns about the parents meeting each other, the need for this will be reduced.

2) That there be mid-week contact, normally picking up the child from school/nursery, and, if practical, the child staying overnight. This will increase the range of activities that the children share with both parents. It is important, for example, that both parents are involved in homework.

3) That 'half the holidays' be interpreted as half the time school children are not at school rather than half the time the adults have as holidays. It should include having school training days and having other holidays and festival days, if the parents cannot both be involved.

The lives of babies and children too young to go to school are less constrained. Shared parenting will often mean a more equal allocation of parenting time than is possible for older children, which can benefit both parents e.g. by allowing them to do paid work more easily, as well as the child.

4) That special days - for example Christmas or other festival holidays, the children's and their siblings' birthdays - be equally shared if the parents cannot be together for them. That the children also be allowed to be with the relevant parent for days that are special for that parent - for example their birthdays and those of their grandparents, or for other festivals and important events. Examples are ‘take your child to work days’, sports fixtures (for both the children and the parents), Mothers’ Day with their mothers and Fathers’ Day with their fathers.

5) That the children are not put into day-care, after-school clubs, babysat or other alternatives to parental care, if one of their parents is available to look after them.

6) If one parent has demands that restrict their availability for parenting they should not be allowed to claim priority in the time they have available.

7) That time for the children to see their grandparents and wider family - on both sides of the family - must be adequate.

What evidence does FNF have for the importance of shared parenting?

52 MPs signed EDM 482, Children and Shared Parenting (26th January 2004), that:

'this House believes that children are best brought up with the full involvement of both their natural parents and, if possible, grandparents and members of their wider family; further believes that all children of separated parents are entitled to the love, personal care and support of both their natural parents in their everyday lives unless reason is shown otherwise; further believes that both parents have a duty to support the relationship of a child with the other parent; further believes that public and private institutions should recognise both parents of children with whom they deal; further believes that all involved parties should seek to minimise any loss of damage done by divorce or separation or alienation to children's relationships with either of their parents or with their wider family; further believes that the rewards of, and sacrifices of resources devoted to, parenting should be fairly shared between the parents; and calls for public policy to be adapted to remove obstacles to this objective.'

362 MPs signed EDM 128, Parenting Time Presumption (18th May 2005), that:

'this House believes that separated parents should each have a legal presumption of contact with their children, so that both parents can continue to parent their children and children are able to benefit from being parented by both their parents, as well as from contact with any grandparents and extended family members able and willing to play a role in their upbringing; and urges the Government to replace the legal term `contact' with `parenting time' and to ensure that parenting time orders can be and are made and enforced by the courts, save where a child's safety would be at risk.'

13 June 2012 - YouGov poll on fathers and their role within the family: Overwhelming support for equal rights when gaining custody:

YouGov’s poll on the role of fathers, as well as their responsibilities and rights within the family unit, has found overwhelming support among the British public for both parents to have equal rights when gaining custody, as well as shared responsibility for bringing up children. Britons also believe that the role of fathers has changed drastically within the last 50 years.  The poll found that the majority of Brits deem fathers, and their role within the family unit, as important.

  • 85% agree that fathers are instrumental in bringing up children
  • 95% of Brits also agree that both parents should share responsibility when bringing up children.
  • There is also overwhelming support, amongst the British public, for both parents to have equal rights when getting custody of their children (84%).

A father’s role has changed dramatically, according to Brits, with 86% agreeing that it has changed drastically within the last 50 years. However, Britons are divided when it comes to more traditional views - over half are in agreement that a father’s main role should be to provide for the family by working and earning money, with 42% disagreeing with the statement. Detailed Poll Results

May 2016 - Family Disadvantage and the Gender Gap in Behavioural and Educational Outcomes:

David Autor et al. Abstract: Using birth certificates matched to schooling records for Florida children born 1992 - 2002, they assess whether family disadvantage disproportionately impedes the pre-market development of boys. They find that, relative to their sisters, boys born to disadvantaged families have higher rates of disciplinary problems, lower achievement scores, and fewer high-school completions. Evidence supports that this is a causal effect of the post-natal environment; family disadvantage is unrelated to the gender gap in neonatal health. They conclude that the gender gap among black children is larger than among white children in substantial part because black children are raised in more disadvantaged families.

Full Paper

end faq

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FNF HSSF Kite Mark

Families Need Fathers has been awarded the Help and Support for Separated Families Kite Mark which is a new UK government accreditation scheme for organisations offering help to separated families.

Families Need Fathers work with a range of family law professionals, including Family Law Panel.

FNF are pleased to announce a partnership with MyDaddy who have built this excellent app for the significant proportion of fathers who are now newly sharing parenting after separation.

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