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Child Support: Law and Policy
 
 
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Child Support: Law and Policy [Paperback]

Nick Wikeley (Author)

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Book Description

October 1, 2006 1841135321 978-1841135328
This book, by one of the UK's leading scholars of welfare law, analyzes the current UK child support legislation in its broader historical and social context, synthesizing both doctrinal and socio-legal approaches to legal research and scholarship. The book draws on the historical and legal literature on the Poor Law and the development of both the public and private law obligation of child maintenance. Modern child support law must also be considered in the context of both social and demographic changes and in the light of popular norms about child maintenance liabilities. The book is devoted to an analysis of the modern child support scheme, and the key issues are addressed, including: the distinction between applications in 'private' and 'benefit' cases and the extent to which the courts retain a role in child maintenance matters; the basis for, and the justification for, the exception from the obligation for parents with care on benefit to co-operate with the UK’s Child Support Agency (CSA) where they fear 'undue harm or distress'; the assessment of income for the purposes of the CSA formula and the evidential difficulties this entails; the tension between the CSA formula, which ignores the parent with care's income, and the demands of distributive justice; the further conflict between the CSA formula under which liability is capped only for the very wealthy, and the traditional approach of private law, which is premised on children being entitled to maintenance rather than a share in family wealth; the treatment of special cases under the formula by way of 'variations' (formerly 'departures'); the nature of CSA decision making and the scope for appeals; and the efficacy of the provisions relating to collection and enforcement.

Editorial Reviews

Review

...Wikeley presents a compelling and timely argument for conceptualising children's rights as the basis for the child support obligation...The historical and discursive sections of this book are interesting, informative, thorough and thought-provoking...this book provides a thorough, detailed and impressive consideration of both policy and practical questions relating to the child support system in the United Kingdom.Alison PerryLegal StudiesVol. 27, No. 3, September 2007It offers a highly detailed analysis of the current law and practice governing child support (including its interface with private child maintenance) in the United Kingdom and will be of particular benefit to practitioners wrestling with the minutiae of the system...Why do we expect parents to pick up the bill for their children's upbringing? Wikeley is to be congratulated for doing what very few others have done, which is to pose and attempt to answer this question rather than take it as read that of course, they must because they are parents...destined to become a classicGillian DouglasJournal of Social Security LawThis is a remarkable book, from a remarkable scholar. It not only provides sufficient legal detail on the current (2006) system to train a potential specialist child maintenance practitioner, but also the social policy analysis of the place of child maintenance systems across jurisdictions and over time which enable the reader to make sense of the apparent idiosyncrasies of the United Kingdom situationWe should congratulate [Wikeley on his understanding of the difficulties facing all jurisdictions dealing with this issue, rather than offering simplistic solutions.Mavis MacleanJournal of Law & Society, vol.34 no.3 2007a monumental textFor the scholar, the historian, an unlikely to be superceded text. For the lawyer, the definitive guide to what is about to be done away with.John BakerMcKenzie, No. 72December 2006I cannot possibly begin to do justice in this short review to Wikeley's most thorough and comprehensive tour de force of the historiography in law and social policy of child maintenance. His style is clear and accessible and Child Support is without doubt essential reading for anyone engaged in teaching in research, in practice and in advocating for resources and legal reform in the area of child support.Susan S. M. EdwardsJournal of Social Welfare and Family LawVol. 29, No. 2, June 2007

About the Author

Nick Wikeley holds the John Wilson Chair in Law at the University of Southampton.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
private ordering, miscellaneous amendments, spending review, thirteenth report, contribution notice, matrimonial proceedings, ibid para, summary jurisdiction, family assistance, child maintenance obligation, reduced benefit decision, old scheme cases, child maintenance premium, interim maintenance decision, equivalent weekly value, child maintenance liabilities, child support liabilities, child support liability, default maintenance decision, parent with care, written maintenance agreement, guaranteed maintenance scheme, person with care, maintenance calculation, social security jurisdiction
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Secretary of State, United Kingdom, United States, Matrimonial Causes Act, White Paper, Children Act, Court of Appeal, New Zealand, Family Law, The Child Maintenance Obligation, Finer Report, Journal of Social Security Law, Fam Law, Social Security Committee, High Court, Clarendon Press, Northern Ireland, House of Lords, Royal Commission, Modern Law Review, National Assistance Board, Post-War Period, Oxford University Press, Courts Act, Tenth Report
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