Parental Alienation: A Swedish Perspective: Introduction to a Transgenerational Case Study with Policy Recommendations: Towards a resolution of the Controversy in Science and Society on Parental Alienation, Book I. Are Akademi, 2013.
Paper abstract bibtex Modern society is expected to offer a favourable framework for the developing child. One way for public governance to ensuring psychosocial conditions for families in Sweden has been to launch policies meant to promote the mental health of the child and youth during the course of their socialization. Despite legislation and congruent consensus children of divorce face risks of losing support and involvement of one of their parents and suffer compromised access to opportunities of developing full adult societal functionality. However, despite the prevailing policy trend towards ‘equality’ between parents across all political positions the rate of children’s loss of their father contact after separation or divorce is skyrocketing along with the increasing proportion of solitary households. The continuous involvement of both noncohabiting parents to care for their growing child is disrupted due to a lack of policy measures to target real world problems of alienation occurring epidemically in a society that has embraced new patterns of family structure and working life. This social problem is a truly interdisciplinary challenge involving law, social sciences and medicine. Navigating towards effective solutions to such complex problems must rely on several steps of acquiring necessary knowledge, the first of which is a mapping of the deficiencies of the social system. This requires a comprehensive societal diagnosis. The widening gap between professional knowledge and the required competence in decision making among politicians to apply this knowledge is one problem. The slow or absent interest in assimilation of new knowledge among the personnel, and the lack of incentives among responsible officers at public social agencies, is another. The need for international measures of legal integration and social surveillance on a European and global scale is evident, but administrative obstacles and political disinterest still delay the organization of efficient remedies and preventive measures - in Sweden and other Nordic countries of the Western cultural sphere.
@article{Areskoug2013paa,
title = {Parental Alienation: A Swedish Perspective: Introduction to a Transgenerational Case Study with Policy Recommendations: Towards a resolution of the Controversy in Science and Society on Parental Alienation, Book I},
xau = {Areskoug, Nils-Göran},
year = {2013},
xid = {10.3929/ethz-a-010573134},
issn = {978--91-981300-1-0},
keywords = {Social policy and Family system and Child Health and Parenting and Fathering model and Parental Alienaton},
xla = {English},
xu2 = {Legal | Long-term Consequences},
booktitle = {Are Akademi Transdisciplinary Observatory, working papers},
publisher = {Are Akademi},
url = {https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-a-010573134},
abstract = {Modern society is expected to offer a favourable framework for the developing child. One way for public governance to ensuring psychosocial conditions for families in Sweden has been to launch policies meant to promote the mental health of the child and youth during the course of their socialization. Despite legislation and congruent consensus children of divorce face risks of losing support and involvement of one of their parents and suffer compromised access to opportunities of developing full adult societal functionality. However, despite the prevailing policy trend towards ‘equality’ between parents across all political positions the rate of children’s loss of their father contact after separation or divorce is skyrocketing along with the increasing proportion of solitary households. The continuous involvement of both noncohabiting parents to care for their growing child is disrupted due to a lack of policy measures to target real world problems of alienation occurring epidemically in a society that has embraced new patterns of family structure and working life. This social problem is a truly interdisciplinary challenge involving law, social sciences and medicine. Navigating towards effective solutions to such complex problems must rely on several steps of acquiring necessary knowledge, the first of which is a mapping of the deficiencies of the social system. This requires a comprehensive societal diagnosis. The widening gap between professional knowledge and the required competence in decision making among politicians to apply this knowledge is one problem. The slow or absent interest in assimilation of new knowledge among the personnel, and the lack of incentives among responsible officers at public social agencies, is another. The need for international measures of legal integration and social surveillance on a European and global scale is evident, but administrative obstacles and political disinterest still delay the organization of efficient remedies and preventive measures - in Sweden and other Nordic countries of the Western cultural sphere.},
pages = {1-49}
}
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One way for public governance to ensuring psychosocial conditions for families in Sweden has been to launch policies meant to promote the mental health of the child and youth during the course of their socialization. Despite legislation and congruent consensus children of divorce face risks of losing support and involvement of one of their parents and suffer compromised access to opportunities of developing full adult societal functionality. However, despite the prevailing policy trend towards ‘equality’ between parents across all political positions the rate of children’s loss of their father contact after separation or divorce is skyrocketing along with the increasing proportion of solitary households. The continuous involvement of both noncohabiting parents to care for their growing child is disrupted due to a lack of policy measures to target real world problems of alienation occurring epidemically in a society that has embraced new patterns of family structure and working life. This social problem is a truly interdisciplinary challenge involving law, social sciences and medicine. Navigating towards effective solutions to such complex problems must rely on several steps of acquiring necessary knowledge, the first of which is a mapping of the deficiencies of the social system. This requires a comprehensive societal diagnosis. The widening gap between professional knowledge and the required competence in decision making among politicians to apply this knowledge is one problem. The slow or absent interest in assimilation of new knowledge among the personnel, and the lack of incentives among responsible officers at public social agencies, is another. The need for international measures of legal integration and social surveillance on a European and global scale is evident, but administrative obstacles and political disinterest still delay the organization of efficient remedies and preventive measures - in Sweden and other Nordic countries of the Western cultural sphere.","pages":"1-49","bibtex":"@article{Areskoug2013paa,\n title = {Parental Alienation: A Swedish Perspective: Introduction to a Transgenerational Case Study with Policy Recommendations: Towards a resolution of the Controversy in Science and Society on Parental Alienation, Book I},\n xau = {Areskoug, Nils-Göran},\n year = {2013},\n xid = {10.3929/ethz-a-010573134},\n issn = {978--91-981300-1-0},\n keywords = {Social policy and Family system and Child Health and Parenting and Fathering model and Parental Alienaton},\n xla = {English},\n xu2 = {Legal | Long-term Consequences},\n booktitle = {Are Akademi Transdisciplinary Observatory, working papers},\n publisher = {Are Akademi},\n url = {https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-a-010573134},\n abstract = {Modern society is expected to offer a favourable framework for the developing child. One way for public governance to ensuring psychosocial conditions for families in Sweden has been to launch policies meant to promote the mental health of the child and youth during the course of their socialization. Despite legislation and congruent consensus children of divorce face risks of losing support and involvement of one of their parents and suffer compromised access to opportunities of developing full adult societal functionality. However, despite the prevailing policy trend towards ‘equality’ between parents across all political positions the rate of children’s loss of their father contact after separation or divorce is skyrocketing along with the increasing proportion of solitary households. The continuous involvement of both noncohabiting parents to care for their growing child is disrupted due to a lack of policy measures to target real world problems of alienation occurring epidemically in a society that has embraced new patterns of family structure and working life. This social problem is a truly interdisciplinary challenge involving law, social sciences and medicine. Navigating towards effective solutions to such complex problems must rely on several steps of acquiring necessary knowledge, the first of which is a mapping of the deficiencies of the social system. This requires a comprehensive societal diagnosis. The widening gap between professional knowledge and the required competence in decision making among politicians to apply this knowledge is one problem. The slow or absent interest in assimilation of new knowledge among the personnel, and the lack of incentives among responsible officers at public social agencies, is another. 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