Denmark introduces mandatory course for parents seeking divorce

An agreement approved by the Danish Parliament seeks to slow down the simplicity of divorce.

Lars Løkke Rasmussen, Prime Minister of Denmark received at the USA White House by President Trump in 2017. Photo: Pablo Martinez Monsivais /AP

By Paul W. Dennis & News Agencies

Parents seeking a divorce in Denmark, a country in Europe, are now required to take a mandatory course and wait three months before they can separate.

As part of a new divorce law that came into effect April 1, parents with children under the age of 18 who want to end their marriage must first take a 30-minute online course, and then a three-month ‘reflection period’ before a divorce is finalised.

The course is designed to help the divorce-seeking parents and their children adapt as smoothly as possible to their new situation, Evangelical Focus reported last week.

With almost half of all marriages ending in divorce in Denmark, the course has been designed as an aid to improve communication and avoid some of the most common pitfalls that can arise when a family breaks up.

“The digital course answers some of the most fundamental questions that you are left with during a divorce,” Denmark’s Ministry of Children and Social Security told AFP.

If parents fail to complete the course – which is available online or on a mobile phone app – within the three-month waiting period, the couple will remain married.

Set up by researchers at the University of Copenhagen, the programme has 17 modules offering concrete solutions to potential conflict areas, ranging from how to handle birthday parties to how to talk to your children when they’re upset.

Uganda Christian News learnt that experts say the course is a good first step, but they would like to see divorcing parents offered even more counselling.

“It’s a good start,” Trine Schaldemose, the deputy head of family help association Moedrehjaelpen, told AFP, saying an online course was an “easy and cheap decision”.

But, she noted, it’s only helpful “if the conflict level between parents is not too high”.

Joint custody rising

In 2018, the Scandinavian country registered 15,000 divorces, or 46.5 percent of marriages recorded last year, according to Statistics Denmark.

The country has long been a champion of children’s and family rights, offering year-long parental leaves and universal public daycare.

Last year, around 70 percent of children lived together with both their parents, compared to 85 percent in 1980.

Joint custody is increasingly common in the event of divorce, with many experts considering it best for children to live every other week with each parent to maintain close relations.

In less than 10 years, joint custody has risen from 16 percent of children in 2009 to more than 30 percent in 2018, according to the Danish Centre for Social Science Research (VIVE).

Until now, Danes seeking a mutually consensual divorce have been able to do so by submitting a form online, requiring no judge nor waiting period.

The simplicity of proceedings is not controversial in Denmark.

“We think that people are mature enough to know if they want to divorce or not,” said VIVE researcher Mai Heide Ottosen.

Now, once a couple has submitted the online papers, they are sent a personalised link to the course.

– ‘Staggering’ health benefits –

The “Cooperation After Divorce” modules were tested on 2,500 volunteers between 2015 and 2018, and the results were “staggering”, Tribute.com quoted Mr Martin Hald, a psychologist and associate professor at the University of Copenhagen who helped create the course as saying.

“In 12 of 14 cases we could see that the programme had a moderate to strong positive effect on mental and physical health,” he said, improving levels of stress, depression, anxiety, physical or mental suffering, and leading to fewer work absences.

Fuchs recognises that the course can’t work miracles, but says she found it to be a useful tool.

“It’s like they put everything that they thought could help make my life easier into one app,” she says.

The initiative has been broadly welcomed by both the public and politicians, with the exception of the small Liberal Alliance party which doesn’t like the state stepping into the fray.

There has meanwhile been little discussion about the fact that more than half of children in Denmark — 54 percent — are born out of wedlock, and for those parents who separate there is no mandatory course.

They can, however, take the course if they want.

Parents in Denmark with children under the age of 18 who want to end their marriage must take a 30-minute online course.

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