A Roadmap for the Treatment of Parental Alienation. 52(1):15-18, State Bar of Michigan, USA, 2022.
A Roadmap for the Treatment of Parental Alienation [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
Parental alienation is a pathological phenomenon that sometimes occurs in families who are experiencing a high-conflict divorce. Alienating behaviors are the means whereby one parent intentionally and purposefully alienates a child from the other parent by using a variety of tactics and maneuvers to poison the child’s thinking and beliefs. The goal is for the child to reject the targeted parent and to perceive that parent as unloving, undeserving, and even dangerous. If convinced, the child develops the mental condition of parental alienation. The child’s alienation condition can be classified as mild, moderate, or severe in intensity. Each level of severity has a unique treatment approach.
@article{AlanDBlotcky2022arf,
  title = {A Roadmap for the Treatment of Parental Alienation},
  xau = {Alan D. Blotcky, PhD | William Bernet, MD | Jennifer J. Harman, PhD},
  year = {2022},
  address = {USA},
  xet = {Print},
  keywords = {Parental Alienation and Treatment and High-Conflict Divorce and Three Severities of Parental Alienation},
  xla = {English},
  number = {1},
  xu2 = {Classification | Management | Prevention},
  booktitle = {Michigan Family Law Journal},
  publisher = {State Bar of Michigan},
  url = {https://1drv.ms/b/s!AqneSWcIBOtav5p8duxj9LY5MA3V3g?e=cuIt0O},
  volume = {52},
  abstract = {Parental alienation is a pathological phenomenon that sometimes occurs in families who are experiencing a high-conflict divorce. Alienating behaviors are the means whereby one parent intentionally and purposefully alienates a child from the other parent by using a variety of tactics and maneuvers to poison the child’s thinking and beliefs. The goal is for the child to reject the targeted parent and to perceive that parent as unloving, undeserving, and even dangerous. If convinced, the child develops the mental condition of parental alienation. The child’s alienation condition can be classified as mild, moderate, or severe in intensity. Each level of severity has a unique treatment approach.},
  pages = {15-18}
}

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