No. 58-2, April 2020
Index
- An Interdisciplinary Case Management Protocol for Child Resistance or Refusal Dynamics†
- April 2020
- Children Resisting Contact with a Parent Due to Abuse, Alienation, or Other Causes: Can a Proactive Role for Lawyers Contribute to Better Outcomes?
- Concepts, Controversies And Conundrums Of “Alienation:” Lessons Learned In A Decade And Reflections On Challenges Ahead
- Dynamics, Not Diagnoses
- Gatekeeping by Allegations: An Examination of Verified, Unfounded, and Fabricated Allegations of Child Maltreatment Within the Context of Resist and Refusal Dynamics
- Guest Editors' Introduction to the 2020 Special Issue on Parent–Child Contact Problems: Concepts, Controversies & Conundrums
- Ideology and Rhetoric Replace Science and Reason in Some Parental Alienation Literature and Advocacy: A Critique
- Innovative Programs in Israel for Prevention & Responding to Parental Alienation: Education, Early Identification and Timely, Effective Intervention
- Issue Information
- Let's Make a Brand New Start of it in Old New York: Using Mediation to Resolve Open Adoption Disputes
- Manipulation and Domestic Abuse in Contested Contact – Threats to Children's Participation Rights
- Methodological Challenges in Social Science: Making Sense of Polarized and Competing Research Claims
- Misdirection and Double Standards Fail to Clarify Controversial Issues in Social Science
- New York State of Mind: Parental Incarceration and Children's Visitation in New York State
- Parental Alienation and Misinformation Proliferation
- Parental Alienation in U.S. Courts, 1985 to 2018
- Parental Alienation: In Search of Common Ground For a More Differentiated Theory
- Putting Science and Reasoning Back Into the “Parental Alienation” Discussion: Reply to Bernet, Robb, Lorandos, and Garber
- Responding to Severe Parent–Child Rejection Cases Without a Parentectomy: A Blended Sequential Intervention Model and the Role of the Courts
- Response to Milchman, Geffner, and Meier Ideology and Rhetoric Replace Science and Reason in Some Parental Alienation Literature and Advocacy: A Critique
- Response to “Ideology and Rhetoric Replace Science and Reason in Some Parental Alienation Literature and Advocacy: A Critique,” by Milchman, Geffner, and Meier
- Risks and Realities of Working with Alienated Children
- Sherlock Holmes and the Case of Resist/Refuse Dynamics: Confirmatory Bias and Abductive Inference in Child Custody Evaluations
- The Application of the Polyvagal Theory to High Conflict Co‐Parenting Cases
- Trauma‐Informed Interventions in Parent–Child Contact Cases
- We're Still Taking X‐Rays but the Patient is Dying: What Keeps us from Intervening More Quickly in Resist‐Refuse Cases?