Characteristics of families of children who refuse post-divorce visits. Racusin, R. J., Copans, S. A., & Mills, P. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 50(5):792–801, USA, 1994.
abstract   bibtex   
Compared to 88 non-refusers, 12 children who refused post-divorce visits with their noncustodial parents were significantly more likely to be female, to be the oldest child at home, to be in special education, and to have at least one parent with evidence of psychopathology, particularly substance abuse, violence toward spouse, suicidal behavior, or psychosis. Most children in both groups lived primarily with their mothers.
@article{Racusin1994Characteristics,
  author = {Racusin, R. J. and Copans, S. A. and Mills, P.},
  title = {Characteristics of families of children who refuse post-divorce visits},
  journal = {Journal of Clinical Psychology},
  address = {USA},
  year = {1994},
  volume = {50},
  number = {5},
  pages = {792--801},
  isbn = {0021-9762 (Print) 0021-9762 (Linking)},
  abstract = {Compared to 88 non-refusers, 12 children who refused post-divorce visits with their noncustodial parents were significantly more likely to be female, to be the oldest child at home, to be in special education, and to have at least one parent with evidence of psychopathology, particularly substance abuse, violence toward spouse, suicidal behavior, or psychosis. Most children in both groups lived primarily with their mothers.},
  keywords = {Adolescent; Child; Child Behavior Disorders/ psychology; Child Custody; Child of Impaired Parents/psychology; Child, Preschool; Cooperative Behavior; Divorce/ psychology; Domestic Violence/psychology; Female; Humans; Male; Parent-Child Relations; Parenting/psychology; Qualitative Research; Evaluation; Quantitative Research},
  language = {English}
}

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