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A scoping review of the academic literature.
Published November 2019
Overview
The Centre for Better Relationships conducted a scoping review of the Australian academic literature relating to the formation and dissolution of rainbow families and their interactions with family law services. Our aims were to identify any best-practice principles for family law services working with rainbow families, to identify strengths and gaps in the evidence base, to determine the need for a full systematic review, and to identify directions for future research.
Our search yielded 34 articles for full text review and 17 of these met the inclusion criteria. One of the key findings from this review was the impact of heteronormative social values, policy and service delivery on rainbow families. The current evidence base is heavily skewed towards rainbow family formation, a key gap identified in the literature was research relating to how rainbow families dissolve and utilise family law services.
Key messages
Methods
A search of the databases Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar was conducted. Web of Science and Scopus were selected because of their coverage of social science studies, where it was expected that most related articles would be catalogued. Google Scholar was selected as a multidisciplinary database to ensure thorough coverage of the relevant literature across other disciplines. Each database was searched using the terms: ‘LGBT’, ‘same-sex’, ‘family formation’, ‘Australia’, ‘family dissolution’, ‘separate’, ‘divorce’, ‘family law’ and ‘family law services’. Truncation was used on the term ‘family’, ‘Australia’ and ‘separate’ to cover various word endings (e.g. Australian), ‘LGBT’ was used in conjunction with a wildcard symbol to ensure coverage of alternative acronym order and endings. A hand search of key journals and reference lists was conducted to ensure no records were missed through database searching.
Results
The search returned 1867 results. 34 papers were included for full text review and 17 were included for analysis (see Diagram 1). Of the articles included for analysis, 70% were qualitative studies (n = 12), followed by mixed methodology (n = 3), literature reviews (n = 1) and quantitative studies (n = 1). Each article was coded for key themes by the research assistant, themes were then tested for relevance through discussion with the research manager. Themes were chosen based on salience in the literature and relevance to the research questions. Seven subthemes were separated under the three primary themes of heteronormativity, family formation and family dissolution.
Findings
Interview opportunity
Media Contact: Graeme Westaway p. 0438 318 311
e. Graeme.westaway@betterplace.com.au
Serge Sardo is the CEO of Better Place Australia. He is a member of the Board for the Family and Relationships Services Association and a non-Executive Director of Scope Disability Services and the Alcohol and Drug Foundation. He was also previously CEO of the Responsible Gambling Foundation.
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