
Cafcass and Parenting Time: live issues
The previous tab, ‘Chronology’, sets out how we got here.
This tab, ‘Issues’, sets out where we are.
The next tab, ‘2023: Reform’ sets out where we want be and how we can get there.
Index

Family Law Journal: July 2022
This Press Release marks EI’s steady march from an unwelcome insight (1996) to the heartlands of Establishment thinking (2020). Some of the material covered here in introductory form is reviewed in more detail elsewhere on this site.

The effect of ‘EI’ on levels of litigation
The four most dangerous words in the lexicon of family law are, ‘every case is different’ (ECID). Unthinking repetition of this truism (it is true, but only as tru-ism) has damaged one generation and is already tucking into the next. The good news is: a crack has opened up in ECID’s intellectual bunker. There is now a way in.
Family Law Reform: History 1996-2022
Gateway Figures Family Law - Lives effected?
Gateway Figures Family Law - Cost?
Cafcass & Actual Case Outcomes
Cafcass’ caseload: the Actuality
Reform: Winners and Losers?

The Derailed Family Law Reform
A chronology of Section 8 reform, 1996-2020.

Family Law Reform: a lengthy pedigree
To read a ballpark estimate of the figures.

The 2018-22 Family Justice Review: an overview
Some ballpark estimates.

Obstruction: PrLWG2 para 50
This is a straightforward 2017 canter through the stalled EI reform. One might think there must be something seriously wrong with it. Or, there and again, one might not.

PrLWG4: presuming contact?
The first half is easy: winners include children, mothers, fathers, grandparents, families, the courts, the court establishment and the public purse. So who are the losers?

Parenting Time Guidance: Can Cafcass reform?
No.
Cafcass is built to a model that avoids and prevents Thought on Section 8 cases. It is founded on its own opposite. The first useful change by Cafcass entails admitting a virus - Knowledge - that must trigger Cafcass’ drastic restructuring in severely curtailed form and/or its dismantlement.

Cafcass and Parental Alienation
This is the still point of the turning world. On one side of a very simple dividing line are those who favour useful change; on the other, stasis. In twenty-five years, the issue has never been so clear-cut. Q: should parents receive guidance on the issue in dispute?
· the judiciary say yes
· the PrLWG says not
Anyone can see the MOJ and Cafcass are in difficulties…

Family Law Journal: June 2020
The question addressed by this website is: now that Cafcass and Whitehall have spent 25 years on a morning’s work - and are nowhere near the starting line - how much longer should they have? Might a day’s purposeful work by a well-managed group do the trick?