Children’s experiences of home after parental separation
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Authors
Fehlberg, Belinda
Natalier, Kristin
Smyth, Bruce
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Jordan Publishing Ltd
Abstract
This paper is part of an ongoing Australian project that seeks to explore the meaning of ‘home’
for children in separated families. No prior family law research has done so. This is despite the
personal and social significance of home, the reality that most Australian children now move to
some degree across two households if parents separate, and increasing emphasis in policy, law
and professional practice internationally on listening to children regarding their post-separation
living arrangements. Drawing on interviews with 22 children conducted in 2011 as part of a
larger qualitative study, we find that home – or its emotional absence – was constituted
primarily through relationships. Children felt at home when their relationships with others at
the house signalled they belonged, or were welcome in that space. There was no apparent
connection between how often a child stayed at a house and whether they experienced that
house as a home. This preliminary work suggests the value of further research using a larger
sample in which ‘home’ is the focus.
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Child and Family Law Quarterly
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Restricted until
2037-12-31