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In Canada, children have had little opportunity to directly participate in divorce, custody, and access proceedings. The child's voice, if it is heard at all, is usually transmitted by third parties such as the parents, litigants or professionals such as social workers or psychologists.[351] Children in this country generally do not have access to independent legal representation in divorce, custody and access cases and are not given the opportunity to express their wishes, views, or preferences directly to judicial decision-makers.
In the past few years, the position of the child in divorce, custody and access proceedings has been undergoing re-evaluation. There is gradual acknowledgement that a child is an independent human being, separate from his or her parents, with potentially different views and preferences. The importance of the transmittal of the child's views to members of judiciary, who make decisions that will have a significant impact on the child's life, is being understood. The Special Joint Committee on Child Custody and Access emphasized the importance of hearing the child's voice in its 1998 report For the Sake of the Children. Canada also has the responsibility to fulfill its international obligations as a signatory to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.
It is recommended that federal and provincial officials implement these statutory and non-statutory proposals to ensure that the child's voice is heard in a meaningful way in divorce, custody and access proceedings:
"reliable."The
"necessity prong"in the criminal decision R. v. Khan should not be required for custody, access and divorce proceedings that involve children.