Kids come last: The effect of family law involvement in parental alienation. Giancarlo, C & Rottmann, K International Journal of Interdisciplinary Social Sciences: Annual Review, 9:27–42, USA, 2015.
abstract   bibtex   
Abstract: Parental alienation following separation or divorce, in which one parent denigrates the other in order to turn their children against that parent, is a well-documented but poorly recognized form of child abuse in Canada and globally. Children without access to both parents are more likely to be truant, drop out of school, suffer poor health, and engage in at-risk, antisocial behaviours. Though maintenance enforcement programs in western Canada address the issue of noncompliant “debtors” (i.e., payors of child maintenance), there is no organization that addresses the issue of noncompliant “creditors” (i.e., receivers of child maintenance) in providing child access. This study identifies the effect of family law when invoked by the targeted parent in parental alienation cases. The primary investigator recruited
@article{Giancarlo2015Kids,
  author = {Giancarlo, C and Rottmann, K},
  title = {Kids come last: The effect of family law involvement in parental alienation},
  journal = {International Journal of Interdisciplinary Social Sciences: Annual Review},
  address = {USA},
  year = {2015},
  volume = {9},
  pages = {27--42},
  abstract = {Abstract: Parental alienation following separation or divorce, in which one parent denigrates the other in order to turn their children against that parent, is a well-documented but poorly recognized form of child abuse in Canada and globally. Children without access to both parents are more likely to be truant, drop out of school, suffer poor health, and engage in at-risk, antisocial behaviours. Though maintenance enforcement programs in western Canada address the issue of noncompliant “debtors” (i.e., payors of child maintenance), there is no organization that addresses the issue of noncompliant “creditors” (i.e., receivers of child maintenance) in providing child access. This study identifies the effect of family law when invoked by the targeted parent in parental alienation cases. The primary investigator recruited},
  keywords = {parental alienation; parental alienation syndrome; child abuse; children of divorce; family law; Legal; Long-term Consequences; Quantitative Research; Short-term Consequences},
  language = {English}
}

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