Parent alienation law

    • [DOC File]Lack of Empirical Data, Research or Scientific Basis to ...

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      Parental Alienation Syndrome: Frye v. Gardner in the family courts. Family Law Commentator (Florida Bar), 25(4), 19-20, 30-33. Poliacoff, J.H. (2000). Parental alienation syndrome: Frye v. Gardner in the family courts. The Custody Newsletter, 21, 6-19. Rueda, C. (2004). An Inter-Rater Reliability Study of Parental Alienation Syndrome.


    • [DOCX File]Video Tapes - Comprehensive Forensic Associates - Home

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      Invited Panelist, "Parental Alienation Issues:, MCLE Family Law Conference, March 31, 2001. Invited Panelist, "Alienation and Estrangement in High Conflict Families: Clinical and Legal Perspectives", Massachusetts Association of Guardians ad Litem and Division of Psychology at Children's Hospital, Boston. November 11, 2000.


    • [DOC File]Attn: Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for ...

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      Each face is the face of a victim of a kidnapping, a victim of parental alienation. Each child is the child of a parent who is writing to you. As you probably know, American and Canadian judges in an expanding number of states take the matter very seriously and a parent who alienates a child from the other parent can face up to two years in prison.


    • [DOCX File]parental alienation. New York Divorce and Family Law, the ...

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      "Parental Alienation" New York Law Journal. March 26, 2000. By Joel R. Brandes. Parental Alienation was recently described as a situation where one parent intentionally attempts to alienate his or her child from the other parent, by poisoning his mind, and usually succeeds. [FN1] Parental Alienation Syndrome ("PAS") is a disorder that usually ...



    • [DOC File]The Alienating parent, on the other hand, will exhibit ...

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      and the members of various support groups for Parental Alienation. December 31, 2003. The Alienating parent, on the other hand, will exhibit quite different behaviors, signs and symptoms. The following examples of Alienators behavior are what are called Red Flags. The more of these a parent exhibits or enacts, the higher the probability of PAS ...


    • [DOC File]storage.googleapis.com

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      Parental Alienation Syndrome (PAS) Parent Alienation Syndrome is a controversial theory developed by the late Dr. Richard Gardner, a child psychiatrist, who was also its main proponent. It is based on the assumption that the most likely cause of alienation of a child who rejects his father is the child’s mother.


    • [DOCX File]www.thetobycenter.org

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      NORTH DAKOTA LAW REVIEW, Volume 75, 1999, p 323-364 . PARENTAL ALIENATION: NOT IN THE BEST INTEREST OF THE CHILDREN . by Douglas Darnall . EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. Douglas Darnall is a practicing licensed psychologist and the CEO of PsyCare, Inc., an outpatient psychiatric clinic in Youngstown, Ohio. He is the author of DIVORCE CASUALTIES: PROTECTING ...


    • [DOC File]IN RE: A

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      Id. The theory describes “a situation where children are not merely systematically and consciously ‘brainwashed’, but are also subconsciously and unsubconsciously ‘programmed’ by one parent against the other parent.” Id. (quoting Richard A. Gardner, The Parental Alienation Syndrome 59-60 (1992)).


    • FAMILY LAW – FINAL OUTLINE

      A. “Parent” is either a legal parent, a parent by estoppel, or a de facto parent. 1. legal parent – individual who is defined as a parent under other state law. 2. parent by estoppel – individual who, though not a legal parent: A) is obligated to pay child support; OR


    • [DOCX File]Welcome to child custody services.com

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      Parental alienation as a generic concept has been characterized as “behaviors by a parent that negatively influence or poison the child’s relationship with the other parent” (Saini et al., 2012; p. 399; Darnell, 1998).


    • [DOC File]THE PARENTAL ALIENATION SYNDROME IN AMERICAN LAW

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      Parental campaigns to distance children from another parent have been reported in the literature of psychology and law for decades. The most common heuristic in this regard is the Parental Alienation Syndrome, first reported by psychiatrist Richard Gardner in 1985.


    • Article “Parental Alientation Symdrome”

      “Parental Alignments and Rejection: an empirical study of alienation in children of divorced”, J Am Acad Psychiatry Law, 31, 158-70 Kelly, J. B. “Children’s Living Arrangements following Separation and Divorce: insights from empirical and clinical research” Family Process 2007, 46, 35-53


    • [DOC File](a) There may be a continuing sense of fear of the violent ...

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      The basic concept in the Parental Alienation Syndrome is a uni-directional one as if such situations are a linear process when they are, in fact, dynamic and interactional with aspects of each parent's relationship to the other interacting to produce the difficult and stuck situation.


    • The parent alienation syndrom (PAS) in the Netherlands

      Keywords: parental alienation, factor analysis, Gardner’s classification, empirical data. Parental alienation syndrome (PAS) in the Netherlands. Abstract. In the Netherlands, about 20% of children do not have any contact with their non-resident parent after parental divorce.


    • [DOC File]THE PARENTAL ALIENATION SYNDROME IN AMERICAN LAW

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      Title: PARENTAL ALIENATION SYNDROME: GETTING IT WRONG IN CHILD CUSTODY CASES. in: Family Law Quarterly 35 (3): 527-552, 2001. This rebuttal is a chapter of an article entitled “The Parental Alienation Syndrome in American Law”, written by Demosthenes Lorandos, Ph.D., J.D


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