Two of Australia’s leading law experts last week questioned the value of shared parenting.
The presumption of shared parenting was brought in by the Howard Government in 2006.
It means that judges deciding custody cases in the Family Court have to start with a presumption that the kids will be cared for both parents unless there is a good reason why not.
Now, the 2006 changes haven’t necessarily meant that men have had more time with their kids: shared parenting doesn’t mean equal parenting. It just means there is an equal responsibility for the children.
And in fact, many men’s advocates have been disappointed that the reality of shared care hasn’t always matched the ideal.
But I would argue it’s an important position for us to have as a society.
For too long mothers have had automatic right to sole custody and loving, good fathers have had to fight tooth and nail to get more than every second weekend with their own kids.
Where it is logistically possible and good for the kids, shared parenting should always be the standard that courts and counselors aspire to.
Children have a right to be brought up by both parents. This means dads should have the same rights as mums.
It is an absolute tragedy that one in four kids from divorced and separated families see one parent less than once a year, or never.
Sure, some of this may be the result of the media’s favourite target, the “deadbeat dad” who just isn’t interested. But you have to bet that in lots of cases men struggled like hell to see their kids regularly, but gave up because they felt were treated like second-class citizens because they were dads and not mums.
Just because a man leaves a marriage, it doesn’t necessarily mean he’s leaving his kids as well.
In some instances shared custody doesn’t work. It is best where both parents live nearby, where they get along well, and in cases where they did jointly raise the kids together at one time.
Shared custody should always be in the best interests of the children and not just the parents. This shouldn’t mean, however, that dads don’t have any rights at all.
But there is growing pressure on the Federal Attorney General to remove the shared parenting presumption in the Family Court.
The problem, it seems, is that the cases that end up in the Family Court are the very ones where shared custody doesn’t work.
In the end, both parents have a right to raise their children, but it is not an absolute right in every case.
Both parents must ensure that the needs of the children come first, and they must minimize conflict with their former partners and work co-operatively.
The rights of parents to shared parenting are worthless if it makes the lives of their children a total nightmare.
But shared parenting is still the gold standard we should work towards.
Susie O’Brien
See what Herald Sun columnist
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