Collaborative Practice is a relatively new way of dealing with family disputes. Each person appoints their own lawyer but instead of conducting negotiations between you and your partner by letter or phone you meet together to work things out face to face.
Each of you will have your lawyer by your side throughout the entire process. You will benefit from legal advice as you go. The aim of collaborative practice is to resolve family disputes without going to court.
How does the collaborative process work?
You’ve both met with your respective lawyers, discuss the different options and processes available and decide whether that the collaborative process is for you. What can you expect to happen next?
• You will both meet individually with your collaboratively trained lawyer to talk about what to expect in the joint collaborative meetings – you, your partner, your respective lawyers and other collaborative process professionals such as family and child specialists and financial specialists. You and your lawyer will discuss what you both need to do in order to prepare for the first joint meeting
• Your lawyer and your partner’s lawyer will speak to each other either face to face or over the phone in order to plan for your first meeting.
The first joint meeting:
• At the first joint meeting the lawyers will make sure that you both understand that you are making a commitment to working out an agreement without going to court and you will all sign an agreement to this effect.
• You and your partner will be invited to share your own objectives in choosing this process and you will plan the agenda for the next meeting. This will depend on your own individual circumstances but might typically include a discussion about how the children are responding to the separation and what financial issues need to be addressed.
• If time permits you may go on to discuss how financial information will be shared and whether there should be an offline meeting to gather financial information with a financial specialist before the next joint meeting. You and your partner may agree on who will bring what financial information to the next meeting.
Subsequent joint meetings:
• Subsequent meetings will deal with you and your partner’s particular priorities and concerns. You might, for instance, look at involving other professionals such as specialists in pensions and financial planning or people trained to assist children in understanding and coping with the changes you’re your divorce or separation will bring to their lives. The meetings will enable you to reach agreement on how you share finances or what arrangements need to be made for children
The final meeting:
• In the final meeting documents detailing the agreements you have reached will be signed and your lawyers will talk you through anything else that needs to be done in order to implement those agreements. Sometimes a firm timetable for implementation will not be possible, for instance, if the family house needs to be sold.
How long does the collaborative process take?
One of the benefits of the collaborative process is that it’s not driven by a timetable imposed by the court. So to a large extent the process can be built around your family’s individual timetable and priorities.
Thursday, 10 March 2011
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