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'''Parental alienation''' is a social dynamic, generally occuring due to ] or ], when the hostility and negative ] by one parent causes a child to reject the other parent, making access by the rejected parent difficult or impossible. Parental alienation is very controversial in the legal and mental health professions, both in general and in specific situations. Assessment of alienation should distinguish between "pathological alienation" and realistic estrangement; the former is emotionally harmful and unjustified, while the latter is an understandable refusal by a child to see a ] parent.<ref name = Bala2007>{{cite journal | last = Bala | first = N | coauthors = Fidler B; Goldberg D; Houston C | year = 2007 | journal = Queens Law Journal | volume = 33 | title = Alienated Children and Parental Separation: Legal Responses from Canada's Family Courts | pages = 79-138 | url = http://scholar.google.ca/scholar?hl=en&lr=&q=info:pwdqOnkrT8IJ:scholar.google.com/&output=viewport&pg=1}}</ref> | '''Parental alienation''' is a social dynamic, generally occuring due to ] or ], when the hostility and negative ] by one parent causes a child to reject the other parent, making access by the rejected parent difficult or impossible. Parental alienation is very controversial in the legal and mental health professions, both in general and in specific situations. Assessment of alienation should distinguish between "pathological alienation" and realistic estrangement; the former is emotionally harmful and unjustified, while the latter is an understandable refusal by a child to see a ] parent.<ref name = Bala2007>{{cite journal | last = Bala | first = N | coauthors = Fidler B; Goldberg D; Houston C | year = 2007 | journal = Queens Law Journal | volume = 33 | title = Alienated Children and Parental Separation: Legal Responses from Canada's Family Courts | pages = 79-138 | url = http://scholar.google.ca/scholar?hl=en&lr=&q=info:pwdqOnkrT8IJ:scholar.google.com/&output=viewport&pg=1}}</ref> | ||
==Additional Reading= | |||
* Canadian Children's Right Council | |||
* - The Canadian Bar Association | |||
* - The Florida Bar Association | |||
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==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 19:52, 20 May 2009
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Parental alienation is a social dynamic, generally occuring due to divorce or separation, when the hostility and negative affect by one parent causes a child to reject the other parent, making access by the rejected parent difficult or impossible. Parental alienation is very controversial in the legal and mental health professions, both in general and in specific situations. Assessment of alienation should distinguish between "pathological alienation" and realistic estrangement; the former is emotionally harmful and unjustified, while the latter is an understandable refusal by a child to see a abusive parent.
=Additional Reading
- Parental Alienation - Brainwashing a child to hate a parent Canadian Children's Right Council
- Parental Alienation Syndrome: Hidden Facet of Custody Disputes - The Canadian Bar Association
- Parental Alienation Syndrome: How to Detect It and What to Do About It - The Florida Bar Association
- Parents Guide: Coping with Parental Alienation
- Listing of Canadian court cases about parental alienation
- Parental Alienation: Myths, Realities & Uncertainties: A Canadian Study, by Nicholas Bala, Queen's University
- Psychiatric disorder may have led boy to fatally shoot father
See also
References
- Bala, N (2007). "Alienated Children and Parental Separation: Legal Responses from Canada's Family Courts". Queens Law Journal. 33: 79–138.
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