We believe Both Parents Matter

Too many children grow up knowing only one parent. This must change.

Get HelpJoin FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

We work for the well-being of children in separated families to ensure they have meaningful relationships with both parents, wider family and friends.

Get HelpJoin FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

We provide, and encourage the provision of:

guidance, support, education and assistance

Get HelpJoin FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

We campaign to raise awareness and address the issues and challenges facing separated families

Get HelpJoin FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

We promote and undertake research into the issues and challenges facing separated families

Get HelpJoin FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

We emphasise that children need love and care from both parents and their wider families

Get HelpJoin FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

Too many children grow up knowing only one parent. This must change.

Join FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

We work for the well-being of children in separated families to ensure they have meaningful relationships with both parents, wider family and friends.

Join FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

We provide, and encourage the provision of:

guidance, support, education and assistance

Join FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

We campaign to raise awareness and address the issues and challenges facing separated families

Join FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

We promote and undertake research into the issues and challenges facing separated families

Join FNFDonate

We believe Both Parents Matter

We emphasise that children need love and care from both parents and their wider families

Join FNFDonate

 

Children Know That Both Parents Matter

Helping children and families to retain positive relationships after separation or divorce

Get HelpJoin FNFDonate

 

FNF is the leading UK charity supporting dads, mums and grandparents to have personal contact and

meaningful relationships with their children following parental separation since 1974.

We offer information, advice and support services helping parents to achieve a positive outcome for their children.

Our online Forum and our network branches also offer free guidance of solicitors and others familiar with the operation of the family courts.

Welcome to our new website. We hope you will enjoy the improved clarity, content, and the mobile-friendly responsive design.

There may be further improvements we could make, so we would greatly appreciate your feedback and suggestions.

Thank you for your support.

 

 

Children Know That Both Parents Matter

 

Helping children and families to retain positive relationships after separation or divorce

FNF is the leading UK charity supporting dads, mums and grandparents to have personal contact and

meaningful relationships with their children following parental separation since 1974.

We offer information, advice and support services helping parents to achieve a positive outcome for their children.

Our online Forum and our network of branches also offer free guidance of solicitors and others familiar with the operation of the family courts.

Welcome to our new website. We hope you will enjoy the improved clarity, content, and the mobile-friendly responsive design.

There may be further improvements we could make, so we would greatly appreciate your feedback and suggestions.

Thank you for your support.


'TIS THE SEASON...TO BREAK UP THE FAMILY

Two out of five of the whole year’s family break-ups are in few days after Christmas and New Year. Probably, that is more the time when they are announced, rather than because of events during the festivities. There is another, lesser, surge after the summer holidays.

There is, of course, a delay before this has an impact on ‘services’ including our own.

We are, to an extent, an ‘emergency service’ and can expect it to arrive anytime soon. A bit later still, lawyers will be rubbing their hands and getting out their glossy holiday brochures. Later still, the surge will hit the family courts and another wave for us, for support.

Even since the liberalisation of the divorce laws nearly two generations ago, wife on husband petitions have been twice or so more than those the other way around. It says nothing about whose decision it was, but who needed to formalise the situation. Or to put it another way – to whose advantage it was to get a divorce. But self-reports since, have corroborated that the decision was the female partners not the males by roughly two to one.

Both women and men agree on this, though it is in practice impossible to ask both partners to a single relationship. Still less to establish with decent evidence whether the decision ‘had to be’ because of, for example, abuse. Or whether it was ‘simply’ – as if it could ever be that the party making the decision thought they would be better off in all the various ways that could be.

This charity would say, on the basis of experience, but without being able to prove it, that many fathers wanted the couple to stay together because otherwise the children’s relationship with them would be under threat.

We now have ‘no fault’ divorce. No need to prove the ‘other party’ did anything wrong. Supposedly to make the separation less bitter. We see no sign of that happening. Indeed, there is speculation along these lines. Did the accusation of misconduct of some sort actually give the instigator some sort of emotional release? And without that, they need to discharge their feelings in another way – namely using the children to ‘get even’? We, of course, see the worse cases. But there has been no noticeable reduction in the savagery and cruelty shown in the situations brought to us.

Is there scope for an easing, even a solution? In theory, and on paper, obviously. That decisions about the arrangements for children in families in which the parents live apart should be based on what is best for them. So, the children are centre stage. Not on the conflict between the parents, with the children used as weapons and their welfare being collateral damage.

When we see our children fighting over a toy, we break them up. We try to come to some arrangement, usually sharing it, and leave them with the plea ‘Play nicely together’.

The family courts, however, say this. ‘Have a good punch up. We will just stand by and watch. And declare as the winner the one who hurts the other the most’.

JB 14.01,23

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How We Help

 

We are the UK's leading Shared Parenting charity, active since 1974. We believe in a responsible and collaborative approach, both for parenting and also when working for change. We support the end of hidden injustice and a fairer society.

 

Meetings - Local & Online

Get together with others in similar situations and get support and guidance.

 

Helpline

Talk to our Helpliners about your concerns and suggestions for what to do next

0300 0300 363
 

Online Forum

Share discussion topics with thousands of people – includes our Solicitor Clinic as well.

 

Information

Factsheets, Guides & other Parenting Publications, including Research and other Resource

Welcome to Families Need Fathers

Welcome to Families Need Fathers

FNF is the leading UK charity supporting dads, mums and grandparents since 1974 to have…

Walk for Families Need Fathers (Exeter &…

Walk for Families Need Fathers (Exeter &…

Get ready to move those legs! Walk for FNF, because both parents matter We are…

FNF are recruiting - Operations & Marketing…

FNF are recruiting - Operations & Marketing…

FNF Operations and Marketing Officer - vacancy   We are recruiting for the role of…

Family Justice Success in Spain

Family Justice Success in Spain

Spain shows how Equal Parenting Laws leads to: better outcomes for children a quadrupling of…

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