Battered women, their children, and international law : the unintended consequences of the Hague Child Abduction Convention /
Unintended consequences of the Hague Child Abduction Convention
Taryn Lindhorst, Jeffrey L. Edleson.
- Boston : Northeastern University Press, (c)2012.
- 1 online resource (xv, 258 pages) : illustrations.
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- Northeastern series on gender, crime, and law .
Includes bibliographies and index.
Globalization, families, and domestic violence : the Hague Convention in practice -- Emotional terror, physical harm, and women's experiences of domestic violence -- The misinterpretation of domestic violence : recasting survival as child abduction -- The unique situation of Latinas responding to Hague petitions / Child exposure to abduction and domestic violence -- Hague decisions and the aftermath -- How attorneys litigate Hague domestic violence cases -- Judicial reasoning in Hague cases involving domestic violence / Practice and policy implications -- with Luz Lopez and Gita Mehrotra -- [Taryn Lindhorst and Jeffrey L. Edleson] with William Vesneski -- Sudha Shetty.
"Ending a bad personal relationship is extremely complicated when the relationship is transnational. Women whose partners are abusive often turn to family members for assistance. When this means leaving one nation for another with one's children, Hague Convention (1980) international treaties come into play. All too often, the mother is charged with child abduction and forced to return the children to an abusive father. Drawing on a series of true-life stories, the authors reveal important dimensions of domestic law, interpretations of children's best interests, and the legal rationales required to ensure safety for battered women and their children across international boundaries"--Provided by publisher.
9781555538040
Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (1980 October 25)
Parental kidnapping. Abused women. Family violence. Custody of children. Abused wives.