The forgotten 10%’: private family law cases involving non-parents

Project Details

Layman's description

Important decisions are made every day in the family courts about where children live and who they spend time with. Around 90% of private family law cases are between two parents. The other 10% involve one or more adults who are not the child’s parent, such as grandparents, aunts/uncles, and siblings.

This ‘forgotten 10%’ have been overlooked in policy and family justice reform. Recent research, funded by the Nuffield Family Justice Observatory, found around 6,500 children and 14,000 adults are involved in ‘non-parent applications’ each year in England and Wales.

What it will involve
This unique study, in collaboration with leading charities Kinship and Families in Harmony, will bring the forgotten 10% into the spotlight. The research team aim to:

Identify evidence gaps relating to non-parent cases.
Describe the circumstances surrounding non-parent cases.
Explore how the family justice system responds to the needs of families involved.
Understand stakeholders’ perspectives and experiences of non-parent cases.
Build research expertise within lived-experience organisations.
The research will be completed in three stages:

Conducting a scoping review to explore existing knowledge and identify gaps.
Performing an in-depth casefile study to gather qualitative and quantitative data.
Collecting stakeholder perspectives through interviews and focus groups.
StatusActive
Effective start/end date3/03/2526/02/27

Research Groups and Themes

  • SPS Children and Families Research Centre

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