It would probably be more helpful if someone prepared pictorial forms of the main cases and principles in family law, and then barristers could just select the correct one's to include.
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Perhaps. But tbh, in family law it is a lot less about pure law or legal principles. It is more about the factual specifics of what is said to have happened, what is happening now, and what the parties want to happen. Most of this can't readily be distilled into pictorial form.
I also think it is quite rare (but not impossible) to have parental disputes where the parents’ ability to engage with writing is limited to the extent that that is necessary. More commonly, I think they could benefit from simple English and less of it which we fail to achieve.
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