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Child Law

Introduction

Age Restrictions

Children's Name Change Process

Changing a Child's Surname

Child Accidents Compensation Liability

Children Making Legal Decisions

Children Act 1989

Education

Reasons For Absence From School

Academy Schools in Britain

Expulsion of a Child From School

Ofsted

Schools Admissions

School and Special Needs Statutory Assessment

Children With Drugs in School

Parental Responsibility

Parenthood

Parental Responsibility

Do I have Parental Responsibility

Welfare Reform 2009

Care and Welfare

Care and Supervision Orders

Council Support for Children

Child Welfare Checklist

Emergency Protection Orders for Children

Purposes of Emergency Protection Orders

Private Law Orders in Child Protection

Special Guardianship Orders

State Intervention Child Welfare

Child Assessment Orders

Welfare Principle in Family Law

Abduction

Hague Convention for Child Abduction

Child Abduction: Brussels P Regulations in the European Convention

Stopping Child Abduction

Abortion, Surrogacy and Adoption

Surrogacy

Surrogate Parents

UK Abortion Law

Adopting

Applying for Adoption

Child Maintenance

Travel Disqualification with Child Maintenance

Bank Deduction

Curfew Orders

Earning Deductions

Driving Disqualification

Assets Frozen

Imprisonment

Affiliation Orders

 

 

Children’s Act 1989  

The Children’s Act 1989 s17-20 gives local authorities the power to intervene in private matters in order to protect and promote the welfare of children within their governed area.  Every local authority is bound by a moral and legal obligation to provide support and assistance to children within their local areas the emphasis on children who are in need of outside protection.

S17 (1) It shall be the general duty of every local authority:

  1. to safeguard and promote the welfare of children within their area who are in need; and
  2. so far as is consistent with that duty, to promote the upbringing of such children by their families by providing a range and level of services appropriate to those children’s needs.

Children in Need

Every local authority must take reasonable steps to identify the extent to which the children in there area are in need.

Under section 17(1) Children’s Act 1989, a child is considered to be a child in need if:

Powers and Duties of the Local authority

For the purpose of providing care for children in need within a community, the local authority will have specific powers and duties set out under the following schedules.

Schedule 2, Part 1, paragraph 4(1) Children’s Act 1989

Every local authority should take all reasonable steps to ensure and prevent children within their area suffering ill-treatment or neglect.

Schedule 2, Part 1, Paragraph 7

Every local authority shall take reasonable care to reduce the need for care or supervision orders for children within their area.  

Accommodation for children

Every local authority must provide accommodation for any child within its area in need, and appears as a result to require accommodation. This may be as a result of their being no person who has parental responsibility for the child, the child is lost or abandoned or the person with care of the child may not be unable to provide suitable accommodation and care for the child.  

Every local authority shall provide accommodation for any child in need within their area who has reached the age of 16, and who’s welfare is likely to be prejudiced or tarnished without the help and support of the3 local authority organisations. 

A local Authority has the ability to provide accommodation for any child within their area who ha someone with parental responsibility for them, however, the person(s) with parental responsibility has difficulty providing accommodation for them and the local authority can safeguard and promote the child welfare by offering accommodation.  

Before providing accommodation under s 20 the courts will take into consideration the welfare principle and consider the child’s feelings and wishes giving regard to the child’s age and understanding of the given situation.

Voluntary provisions for accommodation under s20 Children’s Act 1989  

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