Psychological reports can be crucial in court custody proceedings when it comes to custody and contact rights. An ‘alienation syndrome’ is repeatedly mentioned, even though it is not scientifically recognized and has long since been banned from international reporting.
After a divorce, parents do not always agree on custody of their children. When the dispute then has to be taken to court, it is often assumed that mothers make up allegations of violence only to alienate the children from the fathers after the divorce. “But in the vast majority of cases, these are not inventions – at least one in three women is affected by violence,” explains Andrea Czak, president of the “Association of Feminist Single Parents – FEM.A”.
Source: Krone

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