It is now a year since The Guardian published startling claims that Cafcass (in England) were introducing new polices and practice guidance that would ‘crack down’ on parents who were guilty of manipulating their children through ‘parental alienation’. It soon emerged, however, that any plans Cafcass had to address alienation were rather more vague than that, as discussed between The Transparency Project and Sarah Parsons from Cafcass here and here.
We are pleased to now be able to write an update on developments that have been, by and large, positive. Both Cafcass and Cafcass Cymru appear to be taking a considered and proportionate approach to problems that their Family Court Advisers might encounter regarding resistance to/refusal of contact – far from the dramatic headlines. The respective organisations have taken professional responses and research on board.
This is not to say that it has become easy to make sense of parental alienation. In Part 2 of this blog post, we explain a newly published court judgment, Re D, that examines, at length, evidence of possible alienation in one family.
The Cafcass Child Impact Assessment Framework (CIAF)
The CIAF, published by Cafcass last month, is a set of resources for practitioners to assess:
- Domestic abuse where children have been harmed directly or indirectly, for example from the impact of coercive control.
- Conflict which is harmful to the child such as a long-running court case or mutual hostility between parents which can become intolerable for the child.
- Child refusal or resistance to spending time with one of their parents or carers which may be due to a range of justified reasons or could be an indicator of the harm caused when a child has been alienated by one parent against the other for no good reason.
- Other forms of harmful parenting due to factors like substance misuse or severe mental health difficulties.
There are several documents available on the Cafcass website. It is anticipated that full training on these will have been provided by March 2019.
We are pleased to see that Cafcass has moved away from any suggestion that parental alienation is endemic, a problem that social workers should be commonly identifying, labelling and making decisions about. Instead, the guidance says that adult behaviours should not be described in terms of jargon or diagnosable conditions but only in terms of their impact on the individual child. The framework says that alienating behaviours are only one aspect of factors in children resisting contact, amongst other groups of factors: domestic abuse; harmful conflict; and harmful parenting.
One of the main concerns that we at The Transparency Project had about earlier drafts of the guidance was that they assumed that Cafcass practitioners had a role in deciding the truth in factual disputes about domestic abuse and/or alienation. The new guidance does not suggest this. It does say as follows:
Domestic abuse, conflict, alienation and other forms of harmful parenting may cause significant emotional harm to children. At the direction of the court, a primary task in Cafcass is to assess the level and impact of all types of risk to children.
Due to the complex circumstances that many children experience, it is likely that that the FCA will need to use tools and guidance from various case factors. The case factors are not designed to be linear pathways and FCAs should navigate fluidly between the different sections depending on the risks present within the case.
The only exception to this (moving fluidly between factors), is where there are features of domestic abuse and/ or harmful conflict. Domestic abuse and harmful conflict are two distinct behaviours and should not be conflated or referenced interchangeably. Where cases feature allegations or indicators of both domestic abuse and harmful conflict, FCAs must prioritise the assessment of domestic abuse and ensure that the risk is adequately reduced/ resolved before addressing harmful conflict. A screening tool has been devised to help practitioners distinguish between the two.
The Domestic Abuse Pathway has been retained in the format of a ‘pathway’ as we are familiar with this. The pathway has been updated as part of this work to bring it up to date.
The new guidance and tools on harmful conflict and child resistance / refusal, have not been set out as pathways to avoid them being overly ‘linear’ and repetitive.
There is therefore no ‘alienation pathway’, but rather an assessment framework that integrates alienating behaviours as a possible factor in the overall impact on a child. However, we can’t find an explicit statement in the principles that fact-finding is the courts’ function, not that of the FCA. We think this would be helpful, so we hope it is emphasised in the ongoing training.
Cafcass Cymru and the National Assembly for Wales
In May 2018, the Welsh Government Minister for Children responded to a petition taken to the National Assembly for Wales by Families Need Fathers as follows:
“The Welsh Government believes a child is entitled to a meaningful relationship with both parents following family separation where it is safe and in the child’s best interests. However, I am clear the welfare of the child should always be at the centre of our concerns.
“We recognise some parents can behave in a way that alienates the other from their child’s life, and that these behaviours can have a significant adverse impact on the emotional well-being of the child.
“We view parental alienation not as a syndrome or a classification, but as a set of behaviours. The most important issue for us is that these behaviours, when they occur, are appropriately dealt with using our family and parenting support programmes and the existing regulatory and legal frameworks.”
Although Families Need Fathers had previously claimed that Cafcass in England recognised parental alienation, whereas Cafcass Cymru did not, the position of both organisations now seems quite similar, in bringing the focus back from an adult agenda to the child.
Research
Cafcass Cymru commissioned a review of the research and the case law about parental alienation, which was published in April 2018 and can be accessed here.
A lengthy but very interesting research study, by Linda Neilson, on 357 cases in Canadian courts that featured claims of parental alienation has since been published.
We understand that both these pieces of work have been influential in the development of the CIAF. The judge in Re D applies the CIAF and the Cardiff research review to the evidence in the case. See part 2.
Community Care podcast
In August, Community Care made a podcast for social workers of an interview with Sarah Parsons from Cafcass (England) and Julie Doughty from Cardiff University, about parental alienation.
Why we need to be cautious about the concept of parental alienation
It is useful to remind ourselves of the origins of the whole concept of parental alienation, created by psychotherapy businesses in the USA, where unregulated ‘reunification camps’ are currently under investigation. This is the subject of a recent TV news report, ‘No oversight for programs advertising they reconnect children with ‘alienated’ parents’.
Image: Hands – creative commons licence on Pixabay
Thanks for this useful contribution.
It might be helpful to other readers if you have a look at the paragraph
‘Although Families Need Fathers had previously claimed that Cafcass in England recognised parental alienation, whereas Cafcass did not, the position of both organisations now seems quite similar, in bringing the focus back from an adult agenda to the child.’
I presume that you mean that we claim that Cafcass Cymru dont recognise Parental Alienation while Cafcass in England does. Evidence from Cafcass (England) to the Welsh Assembly http://senedd.assembly.wales/documents/s74776/05.04.18%20Correspondence%20-%20Chief%20Executive%20CAFCASS%20England%20to%20the%20Chair.pdf includes this specific statement from Anthony Douglas :
‘We recognise parental alienation. I have publicly stated that in my view it has a serious child impact which can properly be called emotional abuse….’
That seems fairly straightforward to me.
In terms of the focus moving to the child it may also help if you look at the evidence session that Dr Sue Whitcombe and I contributed to in January when we were very clear that Parental Alienation is a form of child abuse and mut be seen as this first and foremost. It doesnt seem to matter how many times we state this or make it clear that our charities are grounded in a children’s rights / welfare focus you keep asserting that we are ‘Father’s Rights’ organisations. Sad, but I suppose it’s just inevitable. We eagerly await your reference to Women’s Aid being a women’s rights organisation in a similar way.
The key point however is the continuing minimising of the concept of Parental Alienation by yourselves as well as the wider feminist movement. This manifested most recently in a Tweet from the CEO of Welsh Women’s Aid following her pronouncements about PA on a Welsh Government podcast stating
‘In my experience, abusive fathers claim ‘parental alienation’ against victims when a child refuses contact with abusive parent (justifiable estrangement) & to deflect from their violence’
We didn’t feel that abuse denial like this was appropriate from an organisation such as Welsh Women’s Aid with such a long history of excellent work in overturning stereotypes around abuse. It is of course is the same basic tone taken by Professor Doughty in her ‘research’. Coincidentally the CEO of Welsh Women’s Aid is an Honorary Fellow of Cardiff University.
It’s a minor point but the charity in Wales is not called simply Families Need Fathers and is independent of the English charity. We are now branding as ‘Both Parents Matter’.
Thank you for pointing out that we omitted ‘Cymru’, We have corrected the sentence.With regard to your quote from Anthony Douglas, we intend this blog post to be an update on the current position so have referred to the current CIAF guidance as representing Cafcass (England) policy and practice, rather than a view expressed by Mr Douglas some months ago, before the consultation.
This hasn’t been my experience! The CAFCASS officer appointed wasn’t trained in the recognition of PAS and refused to look at my evidence to support my assertion that my eldest son was the victim of PAS. She said that it would be down to the family court contact order hearing to review all the evidence. At the hearing the presiding judge refused to look at my evidence preferring to rely on the CAFCASS report! Catch-22.
To add insult to injury the PHS Ombudsman has refused to put any blame on the appointed CAFCASS officer so my contact with my son which has been non-existent since Sept 2015 goes on with the blessing of the court and CAFCASS!
Leaving aside the different views and arguments, it is great to have genuine attempts to work things out in this simple yet very complex field of PA and family law.
My comment is on the last echo of the (inevitable) junking of people’s best efforts by holding them to the highest standards. In a field that has struggled for decades to gain even a foothold of acceptance as a valid ‘thing’ to be attended to, it really isn’t surprising that there is not a wonderful established field of science and practice, is it?!
The law is hundreds of years old, yet The Transparency Project exists because we cannot get even basic individual case facts out in the open to look at, let alone ask general questions about whether the damned thing works in terms of outcomes!!
And how DARE lawyers criticise others who earn their living from the work they valiantly try to publish results on, when lawyers above all are heavily invested in recruiting vulnerable people into a system that has many of the features of a mind control cult!! Talk about the pot calling the kettle black!!
I don’t know the TV programme yet, but we can guess the likely angle behind a new phase of attacking people’s best attempts to demonstrate their work and its results. I suspect another ‘pot … black’ moment is in store there too!
All of which is not to deny that there are indeed higher standards of professionalism and science to be aspired to.
Hi Nick, if you can be more specific about who the ‘others’ are that are being criticised by lawyers (and by ‘lawyers’ who you mean) and the TV show you refer to, we will do our best to reply. We’re not clear exactly what your concerns are.