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Wiley InterScience

Family Court Review

Family Court Review

Volume 46 Issue 3, Pages 500 - 522

Published Online: 14 May 2008

Copyright 2010 by the Association of Family and Conciliation Courts



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CUSTODY DISPUTES INVOLVING ALLEGATIONS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE: TOWARD A DIFFERENTIATED APPROACH TO PARENTING PLANS
Peter G. Jaffe 1 , Janet R. Johnston 2 , Claire V. Crooks 3 and Nicholas Bala 4
  1 Faculty of Education at the University of Western Ontario and the Academic Director of the Centre for Research on Violence Against Women & Children
  2 Department of Justice Studies, San Jose State University
  3 CAMH Centre for Prevention Science and Centre for Research and Education on Violence Against Women and Children (University of Western Ontario)
  4 Queen's University in Kingston Canada
Copyright © Association of Family and Conciliation Courts, 2008
KEYWORDS
custody disputesallegations of domestic violenceparenting plans

ABSTRACT

Premised on the understanding that domestic violence is a broad concept that encompasses a wide range of behaviors from isolated events to a pattern of emotional, physical, and sexual abuse that controls the victim, this article addresses the need for a differentiated approach to developing parenting plans after separation when domestic violence is alleged. A method of assessing risk by screening for the potency, pattern, and primary perpetrator of the violence is proposed as a foundation for generating hypotheses about the type of and potential for future violence as well as parental functioning. This kind of differential screening for risk in cases where domestic violence is alleged provides preliminary guidance in identifying parenting arrangements that are appropriate for the specific child and family and, if confirmed by a more in-depth assessment, may be the basis for a long-term plan. A series of parenting plans are proposed, with criteria and guidelines for usage depending upon this differential screening, ranging from highly restricted access arrangements (no contact with perpetrators of family violence and supervised access or monitored exchange) to relatively unrestricted ones (parallel parenting) and even co-parenting. Implications for practice are considered within the context of available resources.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1744-1617.2008.00216.x About DOI

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