Kids in care: not actually home?
Big government systems can blindly break up small family systems. Sometimes – like Trump at the Mexico border and lockdown
Read moreTransforming family separation & divorce
In few, if any, parts of the world is our approach to family breakdown, or to dealing with families in crisis, based on actual scientific evidence of what’s best for children and families.
Too often, we impose too-late ‘interventions’ instead of offering up-front, accessible support and education. Far too often, these interventions are based on a legal approach – family law – which is not the appropriate tool if we’re aiming to look after the health and wellbeing of our children. In fact, not only are such legal interventions too late and not appropriate, but, they’re actually harmful to the very children and families they’re supposed to protect.
In this section, Evidence, you can access a wide range of information, including the results of some of the best scientific research from around the globe.
We will review the available research and data and tell you what statistics you can rely on. In a field often dominated by ideology rather than scientific evidence – by actively promoted ‘fake news’, if you will – we’ll try to help sort the wheat from the chaff.
If you know of better evidence, or more recent research, you’re welcome to share it with us too.
Big government systems can blindly break up small family systems. Sometimes – like Trump at the Mexico border and lockdown
Read moreWhat is kindness? We may need reminding. Here’s fifty good answers in just 90 seconds. We all thrive on kindness
Read moreIt’s official: “not seeing family” was declared the biggest stress factor. In a YouGov survey in Australia at the height
Read moreIt should go without saying that children learn from watching their parents and other adults. But, the extent to which
Read more11 January 2020: In a ground-breaking, scientific paper, 70 scientists from around the globe have come together to try to
Read moreWhy would anyone deliberately separate a child from a parent or caregiver, unless confident that the child would otherwise be
Read moreThe idea of a maternal instinct is deeply rooted in many human societies. But is there really such a thing?
Read moreThis report by the Australian Red Cross highlights the impact on people of being separated from a family member, especially
Read moreThe US book “Childhood Disrupted” led the way in making childhood adversity understandable for all of us. Recent research challenges
Read moreThe jury is in. In fact, it’s been in for a long while: most children do much better in life
Read moreKids’ body reactions tell researchers about the impact of divorce on children and how parents can behave better with them.
Read more