Not exact matches
«Roughly
equal shares of working mothers and
fathers report... feeling stressed about juggling work and family life: 56 percent of working moms and 50 percent of working dads say they find it very or somewhat difficult to balance these
responsibilities,» the organization reports.
However, that breast milk can be pumped and put into bottles so that
fathers can play a more
equal role in parental
responsibilities.
However, they seem to recently be on a campaign to change the perception of fatherhood and show and encourage that
fathers are parents with
equal responsibilities to their partner.We are loving their line of clothes that feature cool messages like, «body effin positive,» and «I don't babysit, I parent.
the
father and mother of a minor child have an
equal responsibility to support their child in the manner suitable to the child's circumstances.
FAMILY LAW — CHILDREN — with whom the child lives — where there are allegations the
father and paternal grandmother sexually abused the child — whether there is an unacceptable risk of harm to the child in the
father's care — where the child has speech and language delays — where the child had spent unsupervised time with the
father after separation — where the parties entered into final Consent Orders in October 2015 — where the allegations arose after that — where the child has been spending supervised time with the
father since October 2016 — where the mother obtained a domestic violence protection order against the
father in 2015 — where an order for
equal shared parental
responsibility is not in the child's best interests — where an unacceptable risk of harm is not found — where the mother is granted sole parental
responsibility — where the child will continue to live primarily with the mother and spend unsupervised time with the
father on an increasing basis
FAMILY LAW — CHILDREN — With whom a child lives and spends time — Best interests of the child — Whether either the mother or the
father presents as an unacceptable risk to the children — Where the
father asserts that the mother is an unacceptable risk to the children — Where the
father opposes orders for the mother to spend time with the children — Where each party seeks sole parental
responsibility — Where
equal shared parental
responsibility is untenable — Where the ICL recommended a three month suspension of the children's time with the
father — Meaning of «meaningful relationship» — Where the mother recognises that it is in the best interest of the children to have a meaningful relationship with the
father — Where a meaningful relationship has been established between the mother and the children — Where the
father does not consider that the children would benefit from a significant and substantial relationship with the mother
FAMILY LAW — CHILDREN — Best interests — Where both parents seek sole parental
responsibility and for the child to live with them — Where the respondent mother believes the child would settle down and accept the arrangement if the court ordered for the child to spend no time with applicant
father — Where the court has a statutory mandate to make parenting orders with the child's best interests as the paramount concern — Where there is little doubt that the child would benefit from having a meaningful relationship with both parents — Where the child's clear views that he does not want to spend time with the respondent mother should be given significant weight in the circumstances — Where the child is of an age, maturity and intelligence to have principally formed his own rationally based views — Where the court is satisfied that it is in the child's best interests for the presumption of
equal shared parental
responsibility to be rebutted — Where the respondent
father is to have sole parental
responsibility and the child is to live with him — Where the applicant mother is permitted to attend certain school and sporting events of the child — Where the child should be able to instigate contact with the respondent mother as he considers appropriate to his needs and circumstances — Where the orders made are least likely to lead to the institution of further proceedings in relation to the child — Where the child is to have the outcome of these proceedings, the effect of the orders and the reasons for judgment explained to him by an expert as soon as reasonably practical.
Given that many policy recommendations suggest more of an
equal responsibility between mothers and
fathers, having a greater insight into how their lives interact, with each other and with their children, is paramount.