The performance of the Judiciary Power in the implementation of services to assist families: the case of the Assisted Visitation Center of the Court of Justice of São Paulo.
With the expansion of social rights, the Judiciary has been called upon to meet the demands of the family in the most diverse contexts, and by fulfilling its duty to guarantee access to the right provided for in the Infraconstitutional Constitutions, it has been implementing actions and services that are different from the jurisdictional provision, and which are close to those already implemented and foreseen by the Executive Power, as is the case of the Assisted Visitation Center of São Paulo - CEVAT.
The objective of the research is to describe how this service has been structured based on biographical and legal references and interviews with the actors who implement them . The research reveals that the implemented services present a voluntaristic characteristic of their actors, are not standardized, and reveal a certain shading in relation to the services already implemented by the Executive Branch, not interacting with it to meet the demand.