Law Commission consultation on disabled children's social care law

Closes 20 Jan 2025

Opened 8 Oct 2024

Overview

This is a public consultation by the Law Commission for England and Wales. We have been asked to review the legal framework governing social care for disabled children in England to ensure that the law is fair, modern and accessible, allowing children with disabilities to access the support they need. For more information about this project, please visit our web page here

We recommend that consultees read the full consultation paper, available here, before responding to the consultation. A shorter summary is available here and an Easy Read version here. Large print and audio versions of the summary are also available on the project web page.

Consultees do not need to answer all the questions if they are only interested in some aspects of the consultation.

Once you have completed your consultation response, we would be grateful if you could complete a short, anonymous survey to help us understand the characteristics of individuals and organisations who have responded. Your answers will be held and analysed separately to your consultation response. The link is here.

About the Law Commission

The Law Commission is a statutory body, created by the Law Commissions Act 1965 for the purpose of promoting the reform of the law. It is an advisory Non Departmental Public Body sponsored by the Ministry of Justice (MoJ). The Law Commission is independent of Government. For more information about the Law Commission please click here.

Responses to this consultation

We aim to be transparent in our decision-making, and to explain the basis on which we have reached conclusions. We may publish or disclose information you provide in response to Law Commission papers, including personal information. For example, we may publish an extract of your response in Law Commission publications, or publish the response itself. We may also share responses with Government. Additionally, we may be required to disclose the information, such as in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act 2000. We will process your personal data in accordance with the Data Protection Act 2018 and the UK General Data Protection Regulation.

Consultation responses are most effective where we are able to report which consultees responded to us, and what they said. If you consider that it is necessary for all or some of the information that you provide to be treated as confidential and so neither published nor disclosed, please contact us before sending it. Please limit the confidential material to the minimum, clearly identify it and explain why you want it to be confidential. We cannot guarantee that confidentiality can be maintained in all circumstances and an automatic disclaimer generated by your IT system will not be regarded as binding on the Law Commission.

Alternatively, you may want your response to be anonymous. That means that we may refer to what you say in your response, but will not reveal that the information came from you. You might want your response to be anonymous because it contains sensitive information about you or your family, or because you are worried about other people knowing what you have said to us.

We list who responded to our consultations in our reports. If you provide a confidential response your name will appear in that list. If your response is anonymous we will not include your name in the list unless you have given us permission to do so.

For further information about how we handle your personal data, please see our privacy notice: https://lawcom.gov.uk/privacy-notice-and-handling-data/.

Any queries on our privacy notice can be directed to: enquiries@lawcommission.gov.uk.

Audiences

  • Citizens
  • Voluntary organisations
  • Local authorities
  • Young people
  • Voluntary organisations
  • Government departments
  • Legal professionals
  • Judiciary
  • Legal professional bodies
  • Public sector
  • VCSE/Charity/Mutual
  • Academics
  • Journalists
  • Family lawyers
  • Child Psychologists
  • Mental health professionals
  • Health professionals
  • Citizens
  • Voluntary organisations
  • Charities
  • Government departments
  • Legal professionals
  • Judiciary

Interests

  • Public Bodies
  • Youth Justice
  • Law
  • Legal aid
  • Access to justice
  • Equality & diversity
  • Family justice
  • Mental health