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Home > About Going to Court > Family Court of Australia pathways

In this section

  • Applying to the courts
  • Court recording and transcripts
  • Family Court of Australia pathways

  • Family dispute resolution
  • Federal Magistrates Court requirements
  • Tips for your court hearing
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When your dispute is about parenting arrangements

The events you are most likely to attend for parenting cases will be managed by a registrar, a family consultant and/or a judge.

Registrar managed court events
A registrar is a court lawyer. Registrar managed events are aimed at preparing your case for trial if a judicial decision is necessary and giving you and your former partner the opportunity to reach agreement without the need for a judicial decision.

Family consultant managed court events
In most parenting cases, you will go through the child responsive program with a family consultant (a court psychologist or social worker).

You will most likely go through the following events:

  1. Initial procedural hearing in a parenting case (run by a registrar)
  2. Child responsive program (run by a family consultant)
  3. Procedural hearing after the child responsive program (run by a registrar)

If after these events, you and your former partner have not reached an agreement, your case will progress to judge managed events.


Judge managed court events
Judge managed events are called trials. Parenting cases will generally go to a less adversarial trial with a judge. Financial issues may be considered by a judge as part of a less adversarial trial if both parties agree and the judge permits this.

  • The less adversarial trial in parenting cases (and other cases by consent)


Magellan
Parenting cases that come to the Family Court that involve allegations of sexual abuse or serious physical abuse of a child go through the Court’s Magellan program. You can read more about Magellan case management by going to the heading ‘Magellan’ in this section.


Duty of disclosure
You have a duty to disclose to the Court and each other party all information relevant to an issue in the case. This includes information and documents that the other parties may not know about. This duty starts with the pre-action procedure before the case starts and continues until the case is finalised. You can read more about duty of disclosure in parenting cases by going to the heading ‘Duty of Disclosure’ in this section. 

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