The Five-Factor Model for the Diagnosis of Parental Alienation. Bernet, W. Feedback: Journal of the Family Therapy Association of Ireland, 6(Summer):pgs. 3–15, Family Therapy Association of Ireland (FTAI), Ireland, 2020.
The Five-Factor Model for the Diagnosis of Parental Alienation [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
The Five-Factor Model is a method for diagnosing parental alienation by understanding and identifying the components of this mental condition. The Five-Factor Model includes the following criteria: Factor One, the child manifests contact resistance or refusal, i.e., avoids a relationship with one of the parents. Factor Two, the presence of a prior positive relationship between the child and the now-rejected parent. Factor Three, the absence of abuse, neglect, or seriously deficient parenting on the part of the now-rejected parent. Factor Four, the use of multiple alienating behaviors on the part of the favored parent. Factor Five, the child exhibits many of the eight behavioral manifestations of alienation. This article presents the historical background of the Five-Factor Model and summarizes the research basis for Factor Four and Factor Five.
@article{Bernet2020The,
  author = {Bernet, William},
  title = {The Five-Factor Model for the Diagnosis of Parental Alienation},
  journal = {Feedback: Journal of the Family Therapy Association of Ireland},
  publisher = {Family Therapy Association of Ireland (FTAI)},
  address = {Ireland},
  year = {2020},
  volume = {6},
  number = {Summer},
  pages = {pgs. 3--15},
  abstract = {The Five-Factor Model is a method for diagnosing parental alienation by understanding and identifying the components of this mental condition. The Five-Factor Model includes the following criteria: Factor One, the child manifests contact resistance or refusal, i.e., avoids a relationship with one of the parents. Factor Two, the presence of a prior positive relationship between the child and the now-rejected parent. Factor Three, the absence of abuse, neglect, or seriously deficient parenting on the part of the now-rejected parent. Factor Four, the use of multiple alienating behaviors on the part of the favored parent. Factor Five, the child exhibits many of the eight behavioral manifestations of alienation. This article presents the historical background of the Five-Factor Model and summarizes the research basis for Factor Four and Factor Five.},
  keywords = {Five-Factor Model; Diagnosis; Evaluation; Management},
  url = {https://1drv.ms/b/s!AqneSWcIBOtav5pAprU6KszvzDB2DQ?e=ue7pvZ},
  language = {English}
}

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