Personality Disorders in Family Court (an excerpt)

Bill Eddy‚ L.C.S.W.‚ Esq.. Personality Disorders Appearing In Family Court Probably the most prevalent personality disorder in family court is Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) — more commonly seen in women (now 2008 research indicates BPD is equally men and women). BPD may be characterized by wide mood swings‚ intense anger even at benign events‚ idealization [...]

The intersection of law and psychology

Attorney Greg Herman wrote series of articles I am linking here on the interplay between law and psychology for the Wisconsin Bar Journal. Attorney Mark Baer wrote this article in 2011 which I found both wise and compassionate in its description of the divorce process.  He states, and I agree, that the adversarial process destroys [...]

Estrangement or PAS?

"Parental Alienation is defined as the deliberate attempt by one parent to distance his/her children from the other parent. An example would be the mother who shares too much information about the father's affair with the children in a covert attempt to cause the children to harbor ill will toward the father. A mother or father [...]

25 ways to create a conflict by Casey Wilson

25 Ways to Intentionally Create Conflict in A Coparenting Relationship 2 Replies By Casey Wilson There is a presumption by many family law professionals that if there is moderate to high conflict it is impossible parents share parental duties including time sharing as well as decision making. This seems reasonable, but these professionals really need to [...]

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