A Qualitative Study of Child Custody Evaluators’ Beliefs and Opinions.

Autor: Sanders, Leslie, Geffner, Robert, Bucky, Steven, Ribner, Neil, Patino, Angela J.
Zdroj: Journal of Child Custody; Jul-Dec2015, Vol. 12 Issue 3/4, p205-230, 26p
Abstrakt: Practices in child custody evaluations have created controversy and debate among professionals. Semi-structured interviews of 10 highly experienced child custody evaluators were analyzed to gain an understanding of the evaluation process, changes in the field, and evaluators’ opinions and beliefs, especially concerning intimate partner violence (IPV) and parental alienation. Although a small qualitative sample, multiple evaluators had extreme beliefs and opinions about the prevalence of IPV in child custody cases, the belief that there is no such thing as parental alienation syndrome (PAS), and the need to differentiate between alienation and estrangement. Evaluators continue to value the ability of parents to co-parent as a top variable for making custody recommendations, seemingly regardless of alleged or substantiated IPV. Other concerning themes were identified and theoretical problem areas are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
Databáze: Complementary Index