Parental Separation and the Child Custody Decision: Toward a Reconception
DAVID G. DUFF and ROXANNE MYKITIUK
ABSTRACT
Contemporary debates regarding the appropriate way to resolve custody
and access disputes reflect deeply rooted conceptions of both the family
and the proper relationship between the family and the state. The prevailing
"best interests of the child" test and judicial presumptions favouring
sole custody embody a traditional definition of the family and a communitarian
image of familial relationships. Conversely, current joint custody legislation
adopts a liberal-contractual paradigm, in which the family is viewed
as a joint partnership and children are conceived as assets to be equally
divided upon termination of the spousal relationship. The authors reject
both notions of the family and the standards for custody determination
associated with each. Instead, they advance a feminist vision of the
family and a feminist approach to the resolution of access and custody
disputes.
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Citation: (1989) 47(Supp) U.T. Fac. L. Rev. 874.
Copyright © 1989. University of Toronto Faculty of Law Review.
All rights reserved.