© 2002 by Oxford University Press
The No Contact Mother: Reconstructions of Motherhood in the Era of the New Father
1 Faculty of Law, University of Melbourne, Australia
This article examines the production of new narratives of selfish motherhood in family law, in the context of disputes about parent-child contact after separation. In the first section, I draw on my empirical research of contact enforcement litigation to tease out the contradictions and gaps between the dominant, or stock, stories of contact disputes, and some counter stories that have emerged from the study. The second part of the article looks at the ways in which recent shared parenting reforms have combined with particular features of the Australian family law system to create a new classification of bad parent the no-contact mother. The analysis focuses on the constraining effects of this reconstruction upon women who raise concerns about a father's capacity to care for the children.
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