ABSTRACT

The Handbook of Divorce and Custody brings together mental health professionals and forensic specialists dedicated to working in the legal arena with families in crisis.  Section I provides the individual perspectives of experienced clinicians, all of whom share a psychodynamic and developmental purview, and supplements their accounts with the viewpoints of a lawyer and a judge.  Section II examines  parental psychopathology, which is often at the root of family conflict and turmoil.  Section III deals with the nature and extent of the state's potential involvement with the family, from ensuring parents' rights to raise their children to identifying those circumstances that justify the termination of parental rights.  The remaining three sections follow the progressive issues engaged by divorcing families as they work their way through the legal system: forensic evaluation, post-divorce legal arrangements, and the emotional aftermath of divorce, including indications for various types of therapeutic intervention. 

Through the Handbook, contributors pay special attention to a set of core issues that underlie - and complicate - the evaluations, recommendations, and judicial determinations that enter into the divorce/custody process.  Specifically, they focus on  the inherent conflict between the family's right to privacy and the state's commitment to the best interest of children; the increasingly uncertain question of what constitutes a family and who has the right to legal standing; the problematic role of fathers in the lives of their children;  the nature of the evaluation process and the role of the forensic expert in a "good enough" evaluation; the important differences between the role of therapist and the role of evaluator; and, finally, the impact of divorce itself on the lives of today's children. 

 

part I|56 pages

The Courtroom

part II|69 pages

Parental Psychopathology and Its Impact on the Child

chapter 6|20 pages

Home Is Where the Hurt Is

Developmental Consequences of Domestic Conflict and Violence for Children and Adolescents

chapter 7|10 pages

Soul Blindness

A Child Must Be Seen to Be Heard

chapter 8|18 pages

Betrayal of the Family

The Parental Affair as Family Incest

chapter 9|17 pages

Parental Alienation

The Creation of a False Reality

part III|48 pages

Parents' Rights and Responsibilities

chapter 12|8 pages

The Rights of Parents and Stepparents

Toward a Redefinition of Parental Rights and Obligations

chapter 13|10 pages

When the State Has Custody

The Fragile Bond of Mothers and Their Infants on the Prison Nursery

chapter 14|14 pages

When Families Cannot be Healed

The Limits of Parental Rights

part IV|70 pages

The Forensic Expert's Challenge

part V|70 pages

The Dilemma of Visitation

chapter 21|9 pages

Visitation in High-Conflict Families

The Impact on a Child's Inner Life

chapter 22|10 pages

Supervised Visitation

Preserving the Rights of Children and Their Parents

chapter 23|14 pages

Relocation

Parents' Needs, Children's Interests

part VI|72 pages

Aftermath and Healing

chapter 24|12 pages

Experiencing the Absent Father

In Sight and Inside

chapter 27|22 pages

Parental Divorce and Developmental Progression

An Inquiry into Their Relationship