If you have experienced intimate partner violence and the violence or the threat of it continues during the breakup process, the professionals helping you see your situation as a so-called high security risk separation. In order for them to know how to help you the right way, be open about factors that create insecurity, such as violence you have experienced or violence against a child or threats of violence. Remember that also e.g. verbal outbursts of anger, attempts to alienate a child and unjustified criminal reports are considered violent behavior.
Wellbeing services counties, parishes and non-profit organizations offer various services to help with separation. The wellbeing services county’s family legal services support children in matters of maintenance, housing, visitation and child support in the event of a divorce or separation, and ultimately the court will resolve the differences between the parties. Specific support for getting safe from violence is offered by services specializing in intimate partner violence work likeNollalinja. Check out more contacts fromthe Contact information page.
When agreeing on a child's affairs, however, the goal is that shared custody and meeting with the distant parent must not endanger the child's safety. There are ways to support this goal.
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In parallel parenting, both parents take care of the children's well-being on their own, and the parents' contact and meetings with the children are organized in ways that support the safety of the person experiencing violence and the children. Communication can be minimized and limited to dealing with only necessary matters concerning the child by agreeing on a sole channel for communication (e.g. e-mail) and by carefully defining the matters to be dealt with and the rules for communication so that it does not get inappropriate. Parallel parenting may also require visitation arrangements where the parents do not meet (see Supervised and supported visits and supervised exchanges).
If the child has two guardians, neither of them can decide arbitrarily, without the consent of the other guardian, how the maintenance of the child will be arranged after the separation. If the parents reach an agreement on issues concerning the child, they can confirm a written agreement on the care of the child and visitation rights with the child welfare officer. The task of the child welfare officer is to assess that the best interests of the child are realised. Parents can also deal with custody and visitation rights issues in family mediation or expert-assisted custody dispute mediation in the district court. However, mediation is only suitable for situations where the conflicts between the parents are not so deep that they prevent communication and finding a solution in the best interest of the child.
When the parents disagree and/or they have no capacity to discuss with each other, the court makes the decision in the child's affairs. Either of the parents can make an application to the court regarding the handling of custody and visitation rights. Under certain conditions, the child can be heard in connection with the case. The court will acquire additional information about the family's situation, the child's living conditions and other factors affecting the resolution of the matter, if it is necessary in regard of the best interest of the child. When the case is pending in court, the court can issue a temporary order regarding the child's residence and visitation rights, which is valid until a final decision is reached. In the application and during the processing of the custody and visitation rights case, it is advisable to bring up the violence experienced in the relationship and/or against the child, because the law obliges the court to find a solution that protects the child from violence.
In a supervised meeting, the professional supervisor maintains auditory and visual contact with the child and the visiting parent at all times. In a supported visit, the supervisor is available to the child and visiting parent during the visit. The child can also meet his or her distant parent in supervised exchanges, in which case the meeting itself takes place freely, for example, at the parent's home, but the exchange situation is supervised by a professional supervisor, in which case the parents do not have to face each other. This can be arranged, for example, if the visiting parent threatens the other parent with violence. When supervised or supported meetings or supervised exchanges are considered necessary arrangements in the best interest of the child, they are recorded as meeting practices in the agreement confirmed by the wellbeing services county (child welfare officer) or in the court's decision on the child's custody and visitation rights. If the child is afraid of the distant parent and the meetings are considered to be clearly harmful to the child, the denial of the meetings can also be considered.
Support is available for starting an independent life. You can discuss solutions for housing and financial support, for example, at the social services in your area or at the support services for victims of violence. If you wish, you can also get conversational therapy, tips about peer support groups or information about other options to find support for recovery.