TIPPINS AND WITTMANN ASKED THE WRONG QUESTION: |
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Authors: | Nicholas Bala |
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Institution: | Queen's University in Kingston, Canada and was a Visiting Professor at Duke Law School |
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Abstract: | Tippins and Wittmann (2005) provide an important analysis of the limitations of child custody evaluations, but they are wrong to propose that court-appointed evaluators should be precluded from making recommendations about best interests decisions. While some of the evidence of evaluators may fail to meet the high standard of reliability expected for "expert evidence," the role of court-appointed evaluators in child-related cases is not the same as the role of party-retained experts in other types of litigation, and the legal basis for their involvement in the family law dispute resolution process is very different. The family courts should not apply the "expert evidence" standard when deciding how to use the evidence of a court-appointed evaluator, but rather should use a more flexible standard that takes account of the family law context. If the Tippins and Wittmann proposal is adopted, it will have negative implications for the resolution of family law cases, including making settlements less common, thereby deleteriously affecting children. |
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Keywords: | child custody evaluation expert opinion evidence best interests of the child |
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