Prevalence of parental alienation drawn from a representative poll. Harman, J., Leder-Elder, S, & Biringen, Z Children and Youth Services Review, 66:62–66, USA, 2016.
Prevalence of parental alienation drawn from a representative poll [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
The current work is the first known representative poll of adults (N = 610) aimed at determining the prevalence of parental alienation. Parental alienation describes actions that a parent takes to intentionally, or unintentionally, distance a child (or children) from the other parent (Darnell, 1998). Results revealed that 13.4% of parents (or 9.03% of the entire sample) have been alienated from one or more of their children. Our findings suggest that tens of millions of adults and their children may be impacted by parental alienation, which is much higher than previous estimates. Furthermore, findings show evidence of parental alienation across all socio-economic and demographic indicators. However, when compared to Census estimates of different demographic groups in the U.S. population, targeted parents were over-represented among Blacks/African Americans and Native Americans, and those with only a high school diploma level education. The sheer magnitude of parental alienation uncovered in this study indicates the need for more attention to be paid to this important and pervasive problem.
@article{Harman2016Prevalence,
  author = {Harman, JJ and Leder-Elder, S and Biringen, Z},
  title = {Prevalence of parental alienation drawn from a representative poll},
  journal = {Children and Youth Services Review},
  address = {USA},
  year = {2016},
  volume = {66},
  pages = {62--66},
  abstract = {The current work is the first known representative poll of adults (N = 610) aimed at determining the prevalence of parental alienation. Parental alienation describes actions that a parent takes to intentionally, or unintentionally, distance a child (or children) from the other parent (Darnell, 1998). Results revealed that 13.4% of parents (or 9.03% of the entire sample) have been alienated from one or more of their children. Our findings suggest that tens of millions of adults and their children may be impacted by parental alienation, which is much higher than previous estimates. Furthermore, findings show evidence of parental alienation across all socio-economic and demographic indicators. However, when compared to Census estimates of different demographic groups in the U.S. population, targeted parents were over-represented among Blacks/African Americans and Native Americans, and those with only a high school diploma level education. The sheer magnitude of parental alienation uncovered in this study indicates the need for more attention to be paid to this important and pervasive problem.},
  keywords = {Parental alienation; Prevalence; Random sampling; Methods; Prevalence; Quantitative Research},
  url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2016.04.021},
  language = {English}
}

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