Losses experienced by children alienated from a parent. Harman, J. J., Matthewson, M. L., & Baker, A. J. L. Current Opinion in Psychology, 43:7–12, Elsevier, USA, 2021.
Losses experienced by children alienated from a parent [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
Parental alienation occurs when a child aligns with one parent and unjustifiably rejects the other as a result of parental alienating behaviors. This article provides an overview of current research and theory regarding the losses alienated children endure. Parental alienating behaviors alter the child’s beliefs, perceptions, and memories of the alienated parent, triggering a cascade of profound losses for the child. These losses include loss of individual self, childhood experiences, extended family, community, and activities and relationships essential for healthy development. Consequently, alienated children often experience ongoing and ambiguous losses and thereby suffer disenfranchised grief in isolation. This review comes from a themed issue on Separation, Social Isolation, and Loss; Edited by Gery C. Karantzas and Jeffry A. Simpson
@article{Harman2021Losses,
  author = {Harman, Jennifer J. and Matthewson, Mandy L. and Baker, Amy J. L.},
  title = {Losses experienced by children alienated from a parent},
  journal = {Current Opinion in Psychology},
  publisher = {Elsevier},
  address = {USA},
  year = {2021},
  volume = {43},
  pages = {7--12},
  isbn = {ISSN:  2352-250X},
  abstract = {Parental alienation occurs when a child aligns with one parent and unjustifiably rejects the other as a result of parental alienating behaviors. This article provides an overview of current research and theory regarding the losses alienated children endure. Parental alienating behaviors alter the child’s beliefs, perceptions, and memories of the alienated parent, triggering a cascade of profound losses for the child. These losses include loss of individual self, childhood experiences, extended family, community, and activities and relationships essential for healthy development. Consequently, alienated children often experience ongoing and ambiguous losses and thereby suffer disenfranchised grief in isolation.  This review comes from a themed issue on Separation, Social Isolation, and Loss; Edited by Gery C. Karantzas and Jeffry A. Simpson},
  keywords = {Parental alienation; Parental alienating behaviors; Grief; Loss; Isolation; Evaluation},
  url = {https://1drv.ms/b/s!AqneSWcIBOtavus8nBmFwtQlU8Y2yg?e=n1qVtY},
  language = {English}
}

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