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- Title
An Interdisciplinary Case Management Protocol for Child Resistance or Refusal Dynamics<sup>†</sup>.
- Authors
Cyr, Francine; Poitras, Karine; Godbout, Élisabeth
- Abstract
High‐conflict parental separation cases associated with child's estrangement or contact refusal take an unusually large amount of court time and generate high emotional costs for parents and children. This paper reports on a study of a research‐based pilot project and protocol, called the Parenting Conflict Resolution (PCR), which is intended to reduce parental conflict, improve interparental communication, and support or restore the parent–child relationship. The protocol was developed at the Superior Court in Quebec City (Canada), and involves single judge case management, and lawyers' commitment to have the child's best interests as their primary consideration and to guide their clients to trust the process. The assigned judge and lawyers have the ongoing involvement of a mandated psychotherapist, taking a family systems approach with the case. The PCR also requires the parents to participate in a psycho‐educational, introspective group program to work on co‐parenting and communication skills. Ongoing communication between the professionals involved in the PCR is required to ensure cohesion and accountability. This pilot project was implemented with 10 high‐conflict families, 6 of which presented with the child's resistance or refusal to see one parent. A qualitative data study was undertaken into the experiences of all the participants. The most salient result is the resumption of parent–child contact in all six contact refusal cases. Discussion highlights key elements to successfully address these cases: (a) interdisciplinary program delivery, (b) systemic understanding of the contact problems, (c) focus on the child's best interest, (d) single judge assigned to the case, (e) lawyers' support of the parents' participation, and (f) psychotherapist reporting to the court. Key Points for the Family Court Community: Child's estrangement or contact refusal takes an unusually large amount of Court time.Need for innovative and out of the box solutions.Implementation of a psycho judicial case management (Quebec, Canada).All the 6 cases who presented with child's resistance or refusal to see one parent (between 4 months upto 2½ years) resumed contact.Key features to successfully address these cases.
- Subjects
SEPARATION-individuation; CONFLICT management; LAWYERS; COMMUNICATION; PSYCHOTHERAPISTS
- Publication
Family Court Review, 2020, Vol 58, Issue 2, p560
- ISSN
1531-2445
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/fcre.12487