NOW
Court Report Lacks Facts
July 2, 2002
by Wendy McElroy
A "report"
just released by the California chapter of NOW on the alleged abuse
of women in family courts is fluff without substance.
Nevertheless, a submissive media is
eating up the report and rushing to sound tired alarm bells.
"Family Court Report 2002" has the ostentatious
trappings of respectable research: 134 pages; four authors, including
the President of CANOW; and a self-declared "three years" of research.
What it doesn't have is evidence.
What is the FCR? It is the supporting
document behind a call to revamp the family court system to eliminate
purported bias against women.
The
report is heavily based upon CANOW's call "for individually prepared
case histories from constituents" and a "detailed questionnaire" posted
on the Internet. ("Constituents" appears to be a synonym for women who
approached CANOW with complaints about the family court system.) CANOW's
subsequent "historical research" and "review of the often bizarre practices
of judges" are based on responses from the questionnaires (p.4).
Moreover, it is the "constituent" and
questionnaire data that makes the FCR news — complete with a press
conference — rather than a university project. It is on this data that
the FCR lives or dies.
It dies. The FCR has gross methodological
errors that render it utterly invalid. The errors include:
A blatant political agenda.
FCR opens with the statement, "the present family court system
in California" is "crippled, incompetent, and corrupt" and "pathologizing,
punishing and discriminating against women."
CANOW's Family Law Task Force has suggested
several strategies to reform the courts to "protect" women (p.3). Although
CANOW's self-description as a "political action organization" does not
invalidate the report, it should raise red flags emblazoned "extra scrutiny
required."
The data is self-selecting.
FRC's much-touted "nearly 300" questionnaires
appear to be all from women who contacted NOW over a three year period
to complain about the family court system. This approach virtually ensures
that all respondents will be both unhappy with the courts and sympathetic
to NOW.
Ask yourself: How many women who thought
the family court system was fair or who disagreed with NOW's slant would
fill out a 20-page, tedious, time-consuming questionnaire? How many
would even find the questionnaire that seems to have been distributed
only to CANOW "constituents," or those who visit its site? The FCR is
not empirical research: it is advocacy propaganda.
FCR omits crucial information
as to how the questionnaire data was processed. For example,
was there any means of verifying the information rendered, such as the
actual circumstances of the described cases in family court? Without
verification, the questionnaires become hearsay or mere testimonials.
Moreover, did CANOW control for multiple submissions from the same individual?
And where is an explanation of the report's sampling methods, its margin
of error...? The data is worthless without such a context.
There is no presentation of
data — e.g., no real break down of questionnaire responses
such as demographics. The "Findings" section (pp. 5-9) presents a set
of conclusions about the abuse of women by the family court system but
no numbers are attached.
For example, how many of the respondents
answered "yes" to whether their ex-husbands or boyfriends had better
legal representation? Was it two of the almost 300, or all? The significance
of the "yes" answer depends upon such numbers. There is no quantitative
analysis.
No information is offered on
how many family court cases occurred in the alleged three-year period
covered by the report. Do the approximately 300 cases constitute
.02 percent, 1 percent or 10 percent of the three-year total? Anything
less than three percent is statistically irrelevant and such testimonials
— if verified — would establish only that sometimes injustice occurs.
According to the Judicial Council
of California (p.44), in recent years there were over 150,000 filings
and over 100,000 dispositions per annum — some years were considerably
higher. Three hundred selected cases spread over three years
is statistically meaningless.
Footnotes are often absent or
"weak."
For example, in the capsule history
of family law in California, the FCR states that, before a bill changed
the law in 1998, "Apparently the existing policy of the state had been
to allow a batterer to obtain custody of his children by arguing the
[sic] for the court's bias toward [the] 'voluntary' joint physical custody/frequent
and continuing contact rule. Frighteningly, research has shown that
abusers are highly successful in gaining custody of their children.[note
56]." (p. 25)
This is an extremely serious charge.
But the evidence backing it up (note 56) merely cites "AB [Assembly
Bill] 200" — that is, the "facts" allegedly "found" by the partisan
legislators or staffers who wrote the bill itself.
No data was collected from men.
However bad the situation is for women in family court, the treatment
of men may be much worse. Without a comparative study, there is no way
to tell.
An extensive critique of the FCR's sloppiness
and/or dishonesty could easily absorb 134 pages itself. But even a cursory
examination should be enough to discredit the report. The media has
no excuse for passing along propaganda as fact. And the fact is: after
three years of research, CANOW offers no data to support its conclusions
or demands.
Wendy McElroy
Wendy McElroy is the editor
of ifeminists.com. She is the
author and editor of many books and articles, including her new anthology
Liberty
for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her husband
in Canada.