Family Law Education Network

Category: Featured Article

The Calm in the Storm​

When families have to reorganise themselves following parental separation, children often find themselves caught in the emotional crossfire. Parental separation and disputes about what happens to the family home and ‘time spent’ arrangements are, understandably, periods of heightened stress and uncertainty for both adults and children. However, amidst the storm, family lawyers hold a unique and powerful position – one that can help to calm the chaos, reduce the intensity of conflict, and support outcomes that promote a child’s long-term wellbeing.

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Conclaves & Hot Tubs

Family law proceedings often involve complex disputes that require expert testimony to resolve intricate issues. Expert conferences, also known as ‘conclaves’ are meetings where experts from both sides come together to discuss their opinions and attempt to reach a consensus.

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From Drip to Deluge

“It is important to consider the ‘floodgates’ argument. That is, these principles, which should only apply to exceptional cases, may become common coinage in property cases and be used inappropriately as tactical weapons or for personal attacks and so return this Court to fault and misconduct principles in property matters.”

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Disrupting Traditions

For centuries, the legal profession has prided itself on structure, process and tradition. But as the world around us changes – families, workplaces, communities, even the concept of justice itself; the question is no longer whether the law will evolve. It’s whether we will. In March 2026, the legal and interdisciplinary professions across Australia and NZ will converge at ICC Sydney for Disrupting Tradition: Innovative Strategies in Family & Estates Law, hosted by the Family Law Education Network (FLEN) and co-hosted by JustFund.

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When Law Meets Innovation

Kate Greenwood – National Director – Innovation & Communication, Family & Relationship Law, Lander & Rogers

Kate joined Lander & Rogers in 2012 as a family lawyer, practising across all areas of family law for six years. Today, she leads innovation and communication for the Family & Relationship Law team, pioneering process improvements and collaborating with technology providers and designers to streamline service delivery. She also plays a key role in communicating the practice group’s strategy, ensuring clarity, alignment, and engagement across teams.

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Tips for Obtaining Leave for Adversarial Evidence

In Persson & Marchand [2024] FedCFamC1F 758 at [51], Schonell J sagely observed that “the choice of expert is very much a lottery” and that “it is for that reason that the Rules permit[s] a party to seek leave to tender and/or adduce evidence from another expert.” So, what options are available when your client loses the single expert witness lottery?

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Bridging Law, Psychology and Technology

When mediator Lisanne Iriks and child expert Sharyn Green-Arndt first crossed paths at a family law conference, neither imagined they would go on to create an institute, a national program, and eventually a parenting app. Yet their partnership has become one of the most innovative collaborations in the family law landscape.

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Survivors – Redefining Access to Justice

Tika: A New Zealand Start up empowering Survivors to Seek Justice through collective action Sexual harm remains one of the most under-reported crimes in New Zealand, with police and Ministry of Justice figures indicating that only 7% of sexual assaults are reported. Despite years of awareness-raising efforts and brave survivor stories, the barriers to reporting and seeking justice remain significant. Recognising this gap, former investigative journalist Alison Mau and barrister Zoe Lawton co-founded Tika—a groundbreaking platform designed to empower survivors and remove the barriers preventing them from seeking justice.

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Bridging the Gap

Dora Ko is a nationally accredited mediator, parenting coordinator, and Family Dispute Resolution Practitioner with over 15 years’ family law experience. From 2022 to 2025, she served as a Judicial Registrar of the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia, managing complex parenting and property matters and conducting court-based mediations. Now in private practice at Dora Ko Mediations, Dora specialises in culturally sensitive, trauma-informed dispute resolution, drawing on her legal expertise and fluency in Mandarin and Cantonese and conversational Japanese to assist families across Australia in achieving practical, lasting agreements.

| Read More

The Calm in the Storm​

When families have to reorganise themselves following parental separation, children often find themselves caught in the emotional crossfire. Parental separation and disputes about what happens to the family home and ‘time spent’ arrangements are, understandably, periods of heightened stress and uncertainty for both adults and children. However, amidst the storm, family lawyers hold a unique and powerful position – one that can help to calm the chaos, reduce the intensity of conflict, and support outcomes that promote a child’s long-term wellbeing.

| Read More

Conclaves & Hot Tubs

Family law proceedings often involve complex disputes that require expert testimony to resolve intricate issues. Expert conferences, also known as ‘conclaves’ are meetings where experts from both sides come together to discuss their opinions and attempt to reach a consensus.

| Read More

From Drip to Deluge

“It is important to consider the ‘floodgates’ argument. That is, these principles, which should only apply to exceptional cases, may become common coinage in property cases and be used inappropriately as tactical weapons or for personal attacks and so return this Court to fault and misconduct principles in property matters.”

| Read More

Disrupting Traditions

For centuries, the legal profession has prided itself on structure, process and tradition. But as the world around us changes – families, workplaces, communities, even the concept of justice itself; the question is no longer whether the law will evolve. It’s whether we will. In March 2026, the legal and interdisciplinary professions across Australia and NZ will converge at ICC Sydney for Disrupting Tradition: Innovative Strategies in Family & Estates Law, hosted by the Family Law Education Network (FLEN) and co-hosted by JustFund.

| Read More

When Law Meets Innovation

Kate Greenwood – National Director – Innovation & Communication, Family & Relationship Law, Lander & Rogers

Kate joined Lander & Rogers in 2012 as a family lawyer, practising across all areas of family law for six years. Today, she leads innovation and communication for the Family & Relationship Law team, pioneering process improvements and collaborating with technology providers and designers to streamline service delivery. She also plays a key role in communicating the practice group’s strategy, ensuring clarity, alignment, and engagement across teams.

| Read More

Tips for Obtaining Leave for Adversarial Evidence

In Persson & Marchand [2024] FedCFamC1F 758 at [51], Schonell J sagely observed that “the choice of expert is very much a lottery” and that “it is for that reason that the Rules permit[s] a party to seek leave to tender and/or adduce evidence from another expert.” So, what options are available when your client loses the single expert witness lottery?

| Read More

Bridging Law, Psychology and Technology

When mediator Lisanne Iriks and child expert Sharyn Green-Arndt first crossed paths at a family law conference, neither imagined they would go on to create an institute, a national program, and eventually a parenting app. Yet their partnership has become one of the most innovative collaborations in the family law landscape.

| Read More

Survivors – Redefining Access to Justice

Tika: A New Zealand Start up empowering Survivors to Seek Justice through collective action Sexual harm remains one of the most under-reported crimes in New Zealand, with police and Ministry of Justice figures indicating that only 7% of sexual assaults are reported. Despite years of awareness-raising efforts and brave survivor stories, the barriers to reporting and seeking justice remain significant. Recognising this gap, former investigative journalist Alison Mau and barrister Zoe Lawton co-founded Tika—a groundbreaking platform designed to empower survivors and remove the barriers preventing them from seeking justice.

| Read More

Bridging the Gap

Dora Ko is a nationally accredited mediator, parenting coordinator, and Family Dispute Resolution Practitioner with over 15 years’ family law experience. From 2022 to 2025, she served as a Judicial Registrar of the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia, managing complex parenting and property matters and conducting court-based mediations. Now in private practice at Dora Ko Mediations, Dora specialises in culturally sensitive, trauma-informed dispute resolution, drawing on her legal expertise and fluency in Mandarin and Cantonese and conversational Japanese to assist families across Australia in achieving practical, lasting agreements.

| Read More