Dehumanizing the Target Parent in Parental Alienation – PODCAST Ep #23

Listen to the latest episode of Parental Alienation: From Couch to the Courtroom and Beyond Podcast.  Podcast Episode 23: Dehumanizing the Target Parent Am. Psychiatric Association and the World Health Organization recognizes Parental Alienation as being included in...

How Do Good People Do Bad Things? – PODCAST Ep. #21

Listen to the latest episode of Parental Alienation: From Couch to the Courtroom and Beyond Podcast.  Podcast Episode 21: How Do Good People Do Bad Things? In this episode, we briefly introduce the social psychology perspective of parental alienation. Spinning of the...

What You Need to Know About How Courts Are Receiving Parental Alienation – PODCAST Ep #17

Listen to the latest episode of Parental Alienation: From Couch to the Courtroom and Beyond Podcast.  Podcast Episode 17: How Courts Are Receiving Parental Alienation A brief discussion on how courts are receiving parental alienation and some of the key features of...

What You Need to Know About Measuring Children’s Acceptance and Rejection (part 2) – PODCAST Ep #14

Listen to the latest episode of Parental Alienation: From Couch to the Courtroom and Beyond Podcast.  Podcast Episode 14: Measuring Children’s Acceptance and Rejection (part 2) This episode is a continuation of episode 12 where the effects the alienating...

What You Need to Know About Measuring Children’s Acceptance and Rejection part 1 – Ep #12

Listen to the latest episode of Parental Alienation: From Couch to the Courtroom and Beyond Podcast.  Podcast Episode 12: Measuring Children’s Acceptance and Rejection (part 1) Parental Alienation practitioners have wanted an assessment instrument to help...

Distinguishing the Difference between Transition Difficulties and Alienation with children During Divorce (Part 2)

This is a continuation of a series of two articles on distinguishing the difference between transition difficulties vs alienation with children during divorce. If the signs of  transition difficulty are present but the child is not acting angrily, coldly, verbally...