Posted on 09/08/2010 12:56:40 PM PDT by fathers1
How many times have you heard or read the phrase the best interests of the child? If you read much about family law and family courts, the probable answer is more times than I can count. Indeed, establish a Google Alert for the phrase and youll get links to several articles, court cases, op-eds, etc. a day, every day of the week. In Canada the best interests of the child has been raised by the Supreme Court to a level of importance that trumps even constitutional considerations.
So, with the phrase in such common usage and so vital to custody decisions, you might think that it (a) means something and (b) those using it know what it means.
But to an astonishing degree, youd be wrong on both counts. In fact, the phrase is more intuitive, a shoot-from-the-hip type of locution. Its like a Rohrschach inkblot test; the interpretation given to it by the user reveals more about the user than about the phrase itself. Thats the point attorney Chris Gottlieb was making in the New York Times recently when she referred to determinations of the best interests of the child as being made subjectively, inconsistently and often erroneously.
Gottliebs quick and dirty description agrees nicely with what academic researchers have been saying for years. As I mentioned in a piece not long ago, psychologists ODonohue and Bradley wrote in 1999 that [t]here is no useful operational definition of what the best interests of the child actually are. They went on to say that both state statutes and psychologists themselves disagree on such basic things as what should be considered relevant to determining a childs best interests. And since the necessary variables arent agreed upon, appropriate tests havent been developed with which to measure the best interests of a child.
And yet, day after day, week after week, year after year, family courts continue opining sagely about the best interests of the child. Undeterred by a lack of much on which to base their opinions, courts continue issuing their orders. It seems that, when wandering in the wilderness, the important thing is to avoid appearing lost.
But now Canadian academic Paul Millar has published a book entitled The Best Interests of Children: An Evidence-Based Approach. As the name indicates, Millar wants to do what should have been done decades ago - bring science to bear on the question of what benefits children when it comes to decisions about custody post-divorce or separation. That is, he takes the novel approach of examining childrens outcomes and attempting to correlate them with things like family structure, gender, parental behaviors, divorce, etc.
His data come from a variety of sources including the National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth, but most importantly from the Central Divorce Registry of the Canadian Department of Justice. Apparently, thats not public information because Millar had to obtain it in its raw form via a freedom of information request. His analysis of the data is the first analysis of custody data published to date, and the first attempt at predicting legal case outcomes using multivariate modelling techniques.
Ill write more about Millars book in the future, but for now I want to focus on one aspect of his work - gender. As I said, Canada enshrines the best interests of the child as the most important factor in child custody decisions, or at least thats what the courts repeatedly say. But what the courts repeatedly do is give primary custody to mothers; in fact, about 90% of primary custody in Canada goes to mothers. As Millar says, the custody data from the Department of Justice illustrate a pronounced reliance on stereotypical notions of gender roles: parental gender is by far the most important predictor of custody outcomes. So youd think that the best interests of children must be highly correlated with gender, specifically the female gender.
But thats not true. In fact, psychologists performing custody evaluations regard the gender of the parent among the least relevant considerations in custody decisions. What Millar calls simple, bivariate analyses support the conclusion that using parental gender to make custody decisions is in fact contrary to childrens interests.
But maybe those psychologists are wrong; maybe other factors tend to congrue with maternal custody and result in better outcomes for children. Millar studies those other factors via a multivariate approach and determines that parental gender is in fact not a predictor at all of any of the child outcomes examined here; that is behavioural, educational or health outcomes.
Therefore, there appears to be a disconnect between the theoretical criterion of custody determinations - best interests - and what actually plays out in the context of the justice system. And given the fact that family courts and family law say one thing - that childrens best interests are paramount - and do another - award primary custody on the basis of a factor (gender) that fails to promote childrens best interests - we must abandon the claim that the court has been acting in childrens best interests.
Those opposed to fathers parental rights will make the argument that, if gender isnt related to childrens outcomes, what difference can it make that 90% of primary custodians are women? Or, as Millar asks if either side of [a] coin is equally good, why then should it matter which side it falls on? His answer is nothing more than the obvious - that a judicial bias against fathers rules out half the population of potential caregivers, many of whom would be better than their female counterparts. That necessarily means that many children arent getting the best available parent, which of course thwarts the best interests goal.
Focused on psychology and child wellbeing as he is, Millar omits the other important answer to the anti-dad crowd - parental rights. If childrens outcomes are paramount, as they should be, and the gender of the parent is not an issue in child wellbeing, then the issue of parental rights takes on additional importance. Since children arent affected one way or the other, it is both morally and legally wrong to exclude one sex in favor of the other in making custody determinations.
Millars book deals with much more than just gender and childrens outcomes, but on that issue alone, it should result in major policy changes in the way custody decisions are made. If courts and policy makers truly place the value they claim to on the best interests of the child, they will radically change the way in which custody is decided in Canada.
But, as Millar points out, weve seen something like this before. In 1986, Canada passed its second Divorce Act which clearly articulated a gender-neutral approach, going so far as to remove all gendered terms such as mother, father, husband and wife. That came against a backdrop of the establishment of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in 1982, which itself emphasized gender neutrality. But,
[p]aradoxically, the introduction of this legislation with its gender-neutrality coincided with a proportionally larger share of sole custody to the mother The introduction of modern ideas of gender neutrality has made little discernible impact on this apparent reliance (on gender) despite a manifest policy of the gender-neutral standard that is the best interests of the child.
That paradox is explained by the fact that, coincident with the the new divorce statute, came a squall of bad research purporting to show that, in some way it was mothers - not fathers - who lost out in custody decisions. Judges were duly educated by same and the concept of gender neutrality, so revered in some contexts, went by the boards in that of child custody and remains there.
The point being that, however clear the case may be for equalizing maternal and paternal custody, there will always be those for whom the concept is anathema and who wont hesitate to use bogus arguments and bogus statistics to back up their biases.
The book is The Best Interests of Children: An Evidence-Based Approach, University of Toronto Press, 2009. Buy one and send it to your friendly MP or Congressperson, perhaps with some key passages underlined.
Excellent post.
Family court is a joke. It is not in the best interest of the children to place their fate in the hands of some bureaucrat that doesn’t have a clue. I could tell you about a particular case that would make a saint cringe but will spare you the details.
In the end...the children suffered.
Mr. Obvious has spoken.
The “best interest of the child” is justice between its parents.
We’ve seriously considered foster parenting and have even gone through the initial classes. However, we have real problems with their 100% drive to always get the kids back with their parents.
As someone who has seen these courts work a bit, it is amazing how the idea “the best interests of the child” often translates into the thought that the parents are the enemy of the child.
First and foremost you need a lawyer. An expensive lawyer. And where does that cash come from? In a good but poor family, something often that was earmarked for the child - college funds, vacation, etc.
I have seen several of these instances where the child would not be allowed back into the house unless one parent was out. Sounds good in some instances, but it’s an incredible disruption in a family. As most every case I’ve been aware of consists of good people trying to clear their name, the havoc the courts and SS (social services!) can cause is deadly.
I love the idea of family court imposed child support, the custodial parent (the mother most cases) solely owns the child support 100% pretax, it's use cannot be contested even if used to buy a new boyfriend gifts, but it's is justified legally as the child's right to support. How men ever got suckered into supporting this is beyond me (The thought they;d be married forever and stick it to the unmarried saps till they came home to am empty house too and got dragged into family court.)
Absolutely.
It's funny how child support is so important that the man should be thrown in jail for not paying (even if it's just because he lost his job), yet somehow it's NOT important enough for the state to keep tabs on whether the woman actually spends it on the children or not.
Worse yet a judge can throw you into jail for missing payments but a criminal that rapes your child gets due process, probable cause, Miranda and a trial.
The women's reward for getting pregnant is a slave for 21 years, unless he can hide his income which many do.
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