Charles Hale QC writes for CityWealth.
Charles Hale QC joins other leading lawyers, writing for CityWealth, in an article debunking four common divorce myths.
To read the full article click here.
Nicholas Fairbank and Klara Slater, write for ePrivate Client about Arbitration in divorce proceedings.
Nicholas Fairbank and Klara Slater write for ePrivate Client on the advantages, and the ‘cloak if invisibility’, arbitration offers high net worth individuals.
To read the article in full click here.
Julia Townend writes for the The Barrister on the Domestic Abuse Act 2021
Julia Townend provides a review of key achievements of the transformative Domestic Abuse Act 2021.
To read the article in full click here.
Ralph Marnham writes for the Lexis Nexis Family Law Blog, reviewing G v G.
In G v G [2021] UKSC 9, the Supreme Court determined that a child in 1980 Hague Convention proceedings who could objectively be understood to be an applicant for asylum could not be returned to the country from which they sought refuge before the final determination of the asylum claim. Ralph Marnham considers the issues.
To read the full article on the Lexis Nexis Family Law Blog, click here.
Henry Setright QC and Michael Gration, write for the Family Law Journal.
Henry Setright QC and Michael Gration analyse the Supreme Court’s examination of the relationship between the 1980 Hague Convention and the Refugee Convention.
To read the full article click here.
Greg Davies writes for the Lexis Nexis family law blog, on Local authority duties in relation to EU Settled Status for looked after children.
Greg Davies (who represented the children in Re Z), looks at the implications of the decision in W and Re Z (EU Settled Status for Looked After Children) [2021] EWHC 783 (Fam) as to important questions of law and procedure concerning children’s immigration status under the UK’s European Union Settlement Scheme (EUSS). Specifically, in W and Re Z , the court provided clear and comprehensive guidance for all local authorities in respect of looked after children, care leavers and children in need.
To read the full article click here.