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International Parental Child Abduction > Abductions > Legal Information for Parents > Important Features of the Hague Abduction Convention - Why the Hague Convention Matters
The Hague Abduction Convention is an international treaty. The United States is one of the many countries who have joined it.
The Convention aims to protect children from the harmful effects of international parental child abduction. It encourages the prompt return of abducted children to the country where they are habitually resident. It also seeks to organize or secure effective exercise of rights of access to a child. The main idea is that the proper court in the country of the child's habitual residence should generally determine custody and visitation matters.
The Convention focuses on the child. It provides a shared civil remedy among partner countries.
Important features of the Convention include:
Filing a case under the Convention does not guarantee that your child will be returned. To obtain the return of your child, through a Hague proceeding, you must first be able to demonstrate:
The Convention must have been in force between the two countries when the removal or retention took place. The dates are different for every country. More information about U.S. partner countries is available here. (Note: When a country joins the Convention, it may not automatically partner with the United States. Before a country is considered a partner with the United States, the United States must generally accept their accession.)
Under the Convention, a court may deny return of an abducted child if one of the following defenses apply:
Note: Interpretation of these exceptions varies from country to country.
Access or visitation: When a parent and their child live in two partner countries, the parent may apply to establish or enforce access/visitation rights. Partners to the Convention agree to promote visitation/access rights of parents.
Filing a Hague Application
Parents may file a Hague Application when the child is taken to a country that is a partner with the United States. The abduction or retention must have taken place after the effective date of the partnership. You can see which countries are partners with the United States here.
For abductions FROM the U.S., see our Filing a Hague Application page for more information.
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