Find a mediator:

Éva Kerpel

full membership
Full membership
(complying with membership criteria regarding ongoing training).


Kék Vonal Child Crisis Foundation
Pf.:125
1364 Budapest
Hungary

Phone: +36/13920029
Mobile: +36/30650 6557
Fax: +36/13541029

Additional informations:
Training in mediation: - Partners, Hungary 2002 - Lege Artis, Hungary 2010 - TIM project, Brussels, 2011 Related qualifications: - Child consultant, Kék Vonal Child Crisis Foundation, Hungary 1997-2011 continous - Trainer,Association of Hungarian Supervisors, 2003 Higher education: economist, Karl Marx University, Budapest, 1978, University of Amsterdam, 1980. My work as a mediator developed from my international work related to children's rights and missing children. The cases I have worked with so far were all international child abduction and international child custody / visitation cases.

Language(s) speaking:
English (Fluent), Hungarian (Fluent)





News

REGISTER: Cross-Border Family Mediation Training (CBFM): 13-19 September 2020 Berlin, Germany
50-hour advanced training course aims to qualify practicing family mediators to mediate crossborder family disputes, including international child abduction, access and custody cases. The course will cover the relevant legal aspects of international family conflicts, differences in national family legislation, the 1980 and 1996 Hague Conventions, the Brussels II bis Regulation as well as the best ...



REGISTER: Cross-Border Family Mediation Training (CBFM) on 22-28 September 2019 in Berlin, Germany
This 50-hour advanced training course aims to qualify practicing family mediators to mediate cross-border family disputes, including international child abduction, access and custody cases. The course will cover the relevant legal aspects of international family conflicts, differences in national family legislation, the 1980 and 1996 Hague Conventions, the Brussels II bis Regulation as well as the...



Family mediation: a successful solution in child abduction cases
Today marks the beginning of International Mediation Week which aims to promote the importance of family mediation in parental abduction cases. Despite its success rate, mediation remains a solution that is not sufficiently used in Europe.