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Privilege, Privacy and Confidentiality in Family Proceedings

Buch | Softcover
392 Seiten
2019
Bloomsbury Professional (Verlag)
978-1-5265-0789-1 (ISBN)
99,75 inkl. MwSt
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How far does a client’s or a child’s confidentiality extend on family breakdown?

Understand the fundamental importance of legal privilege, privacy and confidentiality in family breakdown and in family court proceedings.

Looking at the duties of confidentiality of all practitioners involved in family proceedings, this title puts privilege, privacy and confidentiality in its common law context. It considers and contrasts that family proceedings are almost always heard ‘in private’; and explains how this rule sits with common law principles. It singles out the particular issues in care proceedings where there are parallel criminal proceedings and explains the differences in law and on statutory guidance between the duties of confidentiality between lawyers, doctors and social workers.

This new title helps you tackle questions such as:
Is a child entitled to confidentiality; or is it correct, as Working Together guidance says, that the mature child’s confidences should be ‘shared’?
When can privilege be overridden; and when does it not apply?
Does without prejudice immunity cover a mediator?
When are closed materials procedures appropriate in children proceedings?

This title is included in Bloomsbury Professional's Family Law online service.

David Burrows, is a solicitor advocate who deals with all aspects of family breakdown. As a solicitor advocate he has appeared in family courts and appellate courts at all levels (eg in May 2006 he appeared in two cases in the Supreme Court (then House of Lords); and in one he was the first solicitor to lead as advocate). As practitioner, teacher and writer he has a specialist interest in law in relation to confidentiality and privacy; and concerning rules of evidence and procedure in family proceedings. He was chairman of SFLA (now Resolution) in 2003/4, and remains an active member. He is a founder (and continuing) contributor to Family Court Practice (the ‘Red Book’: first edition 1993). He was secretary to the steering committee for the first mediation service in UK in 1975/6, and of its trustees thereafter. He is the author of Children's Views and Evidence (Bloomsbury Professional) and also Family Law Briefing(available on Bloomsbury Professional's Familty Law online service).

Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Privacy
Chapter 3 Confidentiality
Chapter 4 Disclosure at common law
Chapter 5 Legal Advice privilege
Chapter 6 Litigation Privilege
Chapter 7 Self-incrimination privilege
Chapter 8 Without prejudice immunity
Chapter 9 Relevant Legal Context
Chapter 10 Exceptions from Privilege and Confidentiality
Chapter 11 Procedure: Public Interest Immunity, Privilege and Non-Party Disclosure
Chapter 12 Release or Publication of Court Material to Non-parties: The Law
Chapter 13 Release of court material in family proceedings
Chapter 14 Release of confidential material from family proceedings
Chapter 15 Closed Material Procedures
Chapter 16 Public Interest

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Gewicht 600 g
Themenwelt Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Recht / Steuern Privatrecht / Bürgerliches Recht Familienrecht
ISBN-10 1-5265-0789-7 / 1526507897
ISBN-13 978-1-5265-0789-1 / 9781526507891
Zustand Neuware
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