UK’s crisis-ridden family courts are failing children
The test of a society is how it treats its children, but our family courts are in crisis. Reform cannot be more urgent, writes Robert Hines
The family courts are in crisis. Parents wait months, sometimes years, for hearings that decide where children will live or how finances will be divided. Judges, lawyers, social workers and, above all, families are ground down by a process that is slow, adversarial and bewildering. Reform is not optional. It is urgent.
The causes are hardly a mystery. Courts are drowning in cases, their backlogs worsened by the pandemic. There are too few judges and staff to manage the load. Reports from Cafcass officers, psychologists and social workers arrive late because those services are overstretched. Legal aid cuts mean more parents appear without lawyers, dragging out hearings and straining already stretched judges. Outdated IT systems and weak case management compound the problem. Meanwhile, safeguarding issues create unavoidable complexity.
The result is a system that fails families and children by default. How do we fix this?
Technology as an........
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