MEDIATION TO RESOLVE CHILD ABDUCTION ISSUES

Citation(2018) 30 SAcLJ 575
AuthorSir Mathew THORPE MA (Oxon); Former Lord Justice of Appeal (England and Wales); Former Vice-President of the Family Division and Head of International Family Justice (England and Wales).
Date01 December 2018
Published date01 December 2018

FOR HAGUE AND NON-HAGUE CONVENTION COUNTRIES

A Personal Account of the Author's Experience in Legal Practice

The conventional view was that mediation had no role in applications for a return order brought under the Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (“Hague Abduction Convention”). However, mediation has been carried out for Hague Abduction Convention cases in the past decades with some success and has gradually become a more common practice. In recognition of this, in 2011, the “Guide to Good Practice under the Hague Convention of 25 October 1980 on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction – Part V – Mediation” was published. This article discusses the work done by various international organisations and bodies to promote the use of mediation for international child abduction disputes, thus contributing to a shift in professional attitudes. There are still a significant number of countries which have not acceded to the Hague Abduction Convention. In such countries, there will be no available court or no remedy within the available court for a parent whose child has been abducted there. For such cases, the present author argues that mediation is a “front-runner” solution. It may be brokered by actors other than lawyers. The article gives an example where mediation had been successfully used to enable the return of children to the UK from such a country, namely, Pakistan. The author analyses the factors and conditions for the success of the mediation process, discusses various developments in international family mediation for child abduction cases, and shares his views on the challenges facing the development of a global network of international mediators.

I. Abductions that engage Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction1

1 The Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (“Hague Abduction Convention”) will be very familiar to anyone with any experience of international family justice. For it is the corner stone of international family law. It was intended to put an end to the prevalent evil of child-kidnapping. It succeeded in that aim and has stood the test of time. A considerable body of case law has developed guiding the construction and application of the Convention. That case law is helpfully made available by the Hague Conference on Private International Law (“HCCH”) on its INCADAT website tool.2

2 The conventional view was that mediation had no role in applications for a return order brought under the Hague Abduction Convention. For that now historic view, there were a number of plausible supporting arguments. First, the professional practice of mediation was still in a stage of relatively early development and such services as were available generally focused on litigation in domestic rather than in international child law. Second, given the general target of six weeks from issue to judgment, mediation was seen as a threat to the timetable and therefore not compatible with hot pursuit proceedings. Third, the limited nature of Hague Abduction Convention proceedings, namely, only to reverse the abduction by restoring the child to its country of residence, suggested that any mediation as well as any judicial investigation of wider welfare issues should be in that jurisdiction rather than in the jurisdiction determining the application for the return order. Fourth, a point connected to the last. What would be the scope and bounds of a projected mediation? Abductions do not come without a long and complicated history. They do not happen on a whim or on the spur of the moment. They are generally long premeditated and planned with much more care than a summer holiday. So, does the mediation encompass the relatively concise issue of return? Or, does it grapple with the long-standing, deep-seated problems in the parental relationship? The answer to that question will bear on the requisite skill and experience of the mediator. Further, if it is to be all-issues mediation, that would be even harder to fit within the six-week timetable. It is easy to predict that the mediation would become the tail wagging the dog. Fifth, in abduction cases, the parents often have different nationalities, different mother tongues and different faiths. A single mediator might not gain the confidence of both parents or not maintain it through a protracted and emotionally charged mediation. Reality might require two mediators – one matching the gender, language and faith of each parent. Two mediators are harder to identify, agree and fund than one. Sixth, who will provide whatever mediation service is required. There is no clear international service provider. However, in the UK, there is the charity, Reunite International Child Abduction Centre (“Reunite”); in Germany, there is a similar charity, MiKK; and in the Netherlands, there is International Child Abduction Center (“IKO”). These are well-known national resources that are experienced and expert in providing mediation in transnational abduction cases.3 But they do not individually carry a global profile. At the end of such a succession of obstacles, it may be thought surprising that in the course of the last decade, the obstacles have either diminished or turned out to be illusory.

3 In summary, it is very clear that mediation was never in the contemplation of the drafters of the Hague Abduction Convention. Nigel Lowe, in the second edition of his magisterial authority, The International Movement of Children: Law Practice and Procedure, offered a salutary historical perspective. When he completed the first edition in 2003, mediation was unknown in Hague Abduction Convention proceedings. He reminded us that it was the UK charity, Reunite, that proved its conviction that mediation should be the norm in abduction cases.4 In 2003, Reunite obtained a grant from the Nuffield Foundation to conduct research into the mediation of abduction cases. Some of the cases within the survey were face to face, some were with parents continents apart and conducted by telephone. Even in such cases, a successful, or partially successful, outcome was achieved. On a small sample of just over 40 cases, a surprisingly high percentage of success was achieved. Of the 41 cases referred, 28 proceeded to mediation, of which 21 concluded with a memorandum of understanding. Marilyn Freeman was commissioned by Reunite to carry out this research and her reports were available by 2006.5 It is important to reckon partial success in any analysis of outcome since any issue converted from contentious to agreed is a gain, the scale of which depends on the scale of the issue or issues agreed. Freeman's...

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