We already knew that parenthood is a journey strewn with obstacles, whatever the age of your child.
But working on this thorny subject does not seem to be easy either.
Since its launch at the beginning of December by Aurore Bergé, then Minister in charge of Families, the commission “to meet the challenges of parenthood” chaired by child psychiatrist Serge Hefez and Hélène Roques, author and director of the company Notre Avenir à Tous, has been going through areas of turbulence.
Originally composed of twenty-five experts (philosophers, academics, child psychiatrists, psychologists), the body lost at least five members and a minister along the way (Aurore Bergé left her post during the reshuffle, the January 10, to become Minister Delegate in charge of Equality between Women and Men).
So much so that participants, on condition of anonymity, are now wondering about its future.
“Will it be redesigned?
Sustained?
We have no news at the moment,” confides one of them when another mocks the “parental police” desired by the government.
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