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From Father's Property to Children's Rights: The History of Child Custody in the United States
 
 

From Father's Property to Children's Rights: The History of Child Custody in the United States [Hardcover]

Mary Ann Mason
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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A first-rate book. Mason combines a lively style with sound scholarship as she traces the roots of contemporary child custody issues from colonial times to illuminate the cross currents of community values and the bitter legal controversies of the present. -- Judith Wallerstein

Shows that attention to child welfare today is not as consistent as we might assume. [Mason's] evidence reveals a system struggling to find a clear path through conflicting political and social interests while the best interests of the child are often ignored. . . . But what are the best interests of the child? How should courts proceed when children's interests conflict with those of their parents or even of the state? . . . Such questions become intractable in a society that has lost all consensus on what family, parenthood, and childhood mean. Mason has no easy answers, but her history of custody law holds a mirror up to a society that sorely needs to look honestly at its treatment of children. -- Boston Book Review

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-- Judith Wallerstein

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars custody tends to be economically based, Jan 24 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: From Father's Property to Children's Rights: The History of Child Custody in the United States (Hardcover)
This book is fair and comprehensive and, thankfully, free of feminist cant and propoganda. I learned much even though I know the material fairly well. My major insight was that custody has always been based on finding someone who will support the child, indentured servant or divorced wife and protect the State from having to pay. The change from father custody to mother custody has forced the State to become increasingly effective at requiring the parent with money to give the money to the other parent, allowing custody to be given to the less economically viable parent.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Research & Flawed Conclusions, May 28 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: From Father's Property to Children's Rights: The History of Child Custody in the United States (Hardcover)
Mason covers the history of legal custody with the exacting detail of a trained scholar. However, her conclusion that the "best interest of the child," is best served without regard for the best best interest of the parent will give an entire new generation of judiciary the opportunity to vacate parent's civil rights in favor of their children and the state.

Her idea of giving each child in a divorce their own legal representation will most certainly serve the best interests of attorneys everywhere, while leaving middle-class parents pennyless in their pursuit of justice.

For legal education and precedent this book rates a 10. For the long-term health of civilization, it deserves a 0.

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Amazon.com: 3.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)

6 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars custody tends to be economically based, Jan 24 1999
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: From Father's Property to Children's Rights: The History of Child Custody in the United States (Hardcover)
This book is fair and comprehensive and, thankfully, free of feminist cant and propoganda. I learned much even though I know the material fairly well. My major insight was that custody has always been based on finding someone who will support the child, indentured servant or divorced wife and protect the State from having to pay. The change from father custody to mother custody has forced the State to become increasingly effective at requiring the parent with money to give the money to the other parent, allowing custody to be given to the less economically viable parent.

5 of 9 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Research & Flawed Conclusions, May 27 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: From Father's Property to Children's Rights: The History of Child Custody in the United States (Hardcover)
Mason covers the history of legal custody with the exacting detail of a trained scholar. However, her conclusion that the "best interest of the child," is best served without regard for the best best interest of the parent will give an entire new generation of judiciary the opportunity to vacate parent's civil rights in favor of their children and the state.

Her idea of giving each child in a divorce their own legal representation will most certainly serve the best interests of attorneys everywhere, while leaving middle-class parents pennyless in their pursuit of justice.

For legal education and precedent this book rates a 10. For the long-term health of civilization, it deserves a 0.


0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Worthy subject, significant omissions, Jan 17 2011
By aklyric - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: From Father's Property to Children's Rights: The History of Child Custody in the United States (Paperback)
I am pleased to see an author take on the Herculean task of writing about the history and progression of custody. Overall, I believe Mason did a fairly good job of collecting historical facts, assessing trends, regarding patterns and their outliers, and cultivating the amalgam into a fairly well-rounded study. It was frustrating, however, to encounter multiple instances of unsupported opinion stated as fact. In addition, this work ignores the contemporary elephant in the room: the widespread use of pseudo-scientific theories to gain leverage in custody hearings, and the commiserate degree to which the integration of social sciences into the arena of family law has led to the financial destruction of families required to fund its intrusion. Mason hints at the degree to which family court jurisprudence is a socially driven construct, but there is so much more ground to cover. Finally, I would like to have seen the author tackle family court's greatest failing: the nearly absolute lack of accountability towards the citizens it purports to serve in tandem with the wholesale lack of regulation from the judicial gatekeepers entrusted with monitoring its behavior. Readers interested in contemporary family court phenomenon would be better directed to read Dr. Hannah's "Domestic Violence, Abuse, and Child Custody" (2010).
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