Books on the topic 'Divorce intervention'

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1

Freeman, Rhonda. Successful family transition: An evaluation of intervention strategies. Toronto, Ont: Family Service Association of Metropolitan Toronto, 1995.

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2

Journées de valorisation de la recherche (1986 Vaucresson, France). L' intervention judiciaire dans le processus de rupture conjugale: Journées de valorisation de la recherche, Vaucresson, 15, 16 et 17 décembre 1986. Vaucresson: Centre de recherche interdisciplinaire de Vaucresson, 1988.

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3

Children's rights, state intervention, custody and divorce: Inconsistencies and contradictions in social ethics and family law. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 2005.

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4

Ellis, Elizabeth M. Divorce wars: Interventions with families in conflict. Washington: American Psychological Association, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/10359-000.

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5

Hodges, William F. Interventions for children of divorce: Custody, access, and psychotherapy. New York, N.Y: Wiley, 1986.

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6

Interventions for children of divorce: Custody, access, and psychotherapy. 2nd ed. New York: Wiley, 1991.

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7

Interventions for children of divorce: Custody, access, and psychotherapy. New York, N.Y: Wiley, 1986.

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8

Gardner, Richard A. Therapeutic interventions for children with parental alienation syndrome. Cresskill, N.J: Creative Therapeutics, 2001.

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9

Azar, Sandra T., Megan C. Goslin, and Brandon J. Patallo. Children of Divorce and Relationship Dissolution. Edited by Thomas H. Ollendick, Susan W. White, and Bradley A. White. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190634841.013.32.

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This chapter reviews outcomes in children where parental separation has occurred and their complex determinants. As the title suggests, many children encounter parental relationship ruptures that do not involve legal marriage, although our body of research has narrowly focused on this category. This chapter overviews methods used for conducting evaluations with special attention to the more nuanced approach needed when the evaluation occurs in the context of legal actions where custody is being decided. Finally, it highlights intervention strategies that have been used to reduce risk to children and families as they make these transitions. Attention is paid to both psychological interventions and more macrolevel changes aimed to buffer economic costs. Throughout the chapter, data are presented on diversity issues. The lack of findings for fathers in each topic and on dissolution when racial minorities or same-sex couples are considered is highlighted.
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10

Lawick, Justine van, and Margreet Visser. Group Therapy for High-Conflict Divorce: The 'No Kids in the Middle' Intervention Programme. Taylor & Francis Group, 2021.

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11

Lawick, Justine van, and Margreet Visser. Group Therapy for High-Conflict Divorce: The 'No Kids in the Middle' Intervention Programme. Taylor & Francis Group, 2021.

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12

Lawick, Justine van, and Margreet Visser. Group Therapy for High-Conflict Divorce: The 'No Kids in the Middle' Intervention Programme. Taylor & Francis Group, 2021.

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13

Lawick, Justine van, and Margreet Visser. Group Therapy for High-Conflict Divorce: The 'No Kids in the Middle' Intervention Programme. Taylor & Francis Group, 2021.

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14

Elst, Erik van der, Jeroen Wierstra, Justine van Lawick, and Margreet Visser. Group Therapy for High-Conflict Divorce: A Workbook for the 'No Kids in the Middle' Intervention Programme. Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

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15

Elst, Erik van der, Jeroen Wierstra, Justine van Lawick, and Margreet Visser. Group Therapy for High-Conflict Divorce: A Workbook for the 'No Kids in the Middle' Intervention Programme. Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

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16

Elst, Erik van der, Jeroen Wierstra, Justine van Lawick, and Margreet Visser. Group Therapy for High-Conflict Divorce: A Workbook for the 'No Kids in the Middle' Intervention Programme. Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

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17

A, Everett Craig, Lee Robert E. 1943-, and Nichols William C, eds. When marriages fail: Systemic family therapy intervention and issues : a tribute to William C. Nichols. New York: Haworth Press, 2006.

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18

Divorce Wars: Interventions with Families in Conflict. American Psychological Association (APA), 2000.

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19

Creative Interventions for Children of Divorce. Champion Press, 2006.

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20

Divorce: Emotional Impact and Therapeutic Interventions. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2016.

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21

Lawrence, Erika. Relationship Science and Couple Interventions. Edited by Erika Lawrence and Kieran T. Sullivan. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199783267.013.20.

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Relationship distress and divorce often have profound effects on couples and their children. Relationship science has long sought to prevent and alleviate relationship distress; this chapter is a summary of many important recent developments in the field. Ongoing challenges in studying and assisting intimate relationships are also discussed.
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22

Greenberg, Lyn R., Barbara J. Fidler, and Michael A. Saini, eds. Evidence-Informed Interventions for Court-Involved Families. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med-psych/9780190693237.001.0001.

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Children at the center of high conflict divorce and/or child protection cases face increased risks to both current and future health and adjustment. There is a growing research base regarding these risks and the coping abilities skills that children need for successful adjustment, but training gaps and poorly structured services continue to be serious problems. The specific characteristics of these families, and risks faced by these children, underscore the importance of treatment, psychoeducation, and other services adapted to this population and directed to minimizing risks and promoting healthy functioning, autonomy, and resilience for these children. This book provides a critical, research-informed analysis of the core factors to include when developing child-centered approaches to therapy and other family interventions, both in the formal treatment setting and promoting healthy engagement with the other systems and activities critical to children’s daily lives. The book addresses common problems, obstacles, and the backdrop of support from other professionals or the court, which may be necessary for successful intervention. An international team of renowned authors provide chapters covering a variety of service models and drawing on a wide range of relevant research and literature, addressing the legal context, central issues for treatment and other services, and specialized issues such as trauma, family violence, parent–child contact problems, and children with special needs. The book assembles in one place the best of what is known about intervention for court-involved families, along with practical guidance for using relevant research, understanding its limitations, and matching service plans to families’ needs.
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23

Chambers, Clare. Marriage in the Marriage-Free State. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198744009.003.0006.

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This chapter considers the extent to which the state should seek to regulate any private religious or secular marriages that citizens might enter into. In the marriage-free state citizens could still take part in religious or secular marriage ceremonies. This is why the marriage-free state is not a marriage-free society. It does not follow, however, that the state should take no interest at all in such marriages, since they may take place in the context of oppression or injustice. The chapter sets out the case for intervention in marriages that are not recognized by the state, drawing on the model of liberal intervention in cultural practices set out in Clare Chambers, Sex, Culture, and Justice: The Limits of Choice and also on the UK Equality Act 2010. The chapter includes a case study of the agunah problem in Orthodox Jewish marriage and divorce law.
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24

Lawrence, Erika, and Kieran T. Sullivan, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Relationship Science and Couple Interventions. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199783267.001.0001.

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Marriage and other long-term committed relationships are an integral part of our lives and confer many benefits. Unfortunately, many couples experience significant relationship distress and about half of marriages end in divorce. Among those who stay married, a notable number of couples remain in stably, severely distressed marriages for years or even decades. Given the serious physical and psychological consequences of relationship distress and divorce for spouses and their children, it is clear that relationship science––the basic and applied study of relationship development, maintenance, and dysfunction––is of critical importance.The Oxford Handbook of Relationship Science and Couple Interventionsshowcases cutting-edge research in relationship science, including couple functioning, relationship education, and couple therapy. The book begins with the most current definitions of and classifications for relationship dysfunction, which are reflected in the most recent versions of theDiagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder (DSM-5)and theInternational Classification of Diagnoses (ICD-11). Next, the latest research on the biological, psychological, and interpersonal causes and correlates of couple dysfunction and subsequent treatment implications is presented. The latest findings regarding empirically supported prevention and treatment interventions for couple dysfunction are then presented, and diversity and cultural issues are discussed in the context of working with couples. The information contained in this handbook will benefit researchers who seek to understand relationship distress and design interventions to prevent and treat couple distress, and clinicians who are diagnosing, assessing, and treating couple dysfunction in their practices.
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25

Family Restructuring Therapy: Interventions with High Conflict Separations and Divorces. High Conflict Institute Press, 2011.

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26

(Editor), Craig A. Everett, and Robert E. Lee (Editor), eds. When Marriages Fail: Systemic Family Therapy Interventions And Issues. Haworth Press, 2006.

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27

(Editor), Craig A. Everett, and Robert E. Lee (Editor), eds. When Marriages Fail: Systemic Family Therapy Interventions And Issues. Haworth Press, 2006.

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28

Murch, Mervyn. Supporting Children When Parents Separate. Policy Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447345947.001.0001.

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After years of research and reflection on the work of the interdisciplinary family justice system this book offers a fresh approach to supporting the thousands of children every year who experience a complex form of bereavement following parental separation and divorce. This stressful family change, combined with the loss of support due to austerity cuts, can damage their education, well-being, mental health, and long-term life chances. This book argues for early preventative intervention which responds to children's worries when they first present them, without waiting until things have gone badly wrong. The book's radical proposals for reform involve a much more coordinated and joined-up approach by schools, the Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service, and Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. This book encourages practitioners and academics to look outside their professional silos and to see the world through the eyes of children in crisis to enable services to offer direct support in a manner and at a time when it is most needed.
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29

Murch, Mervyn. Supporting Children When Parents Separate: Embedding a Crisis Intervention Approach Within Family Justice, Education and Mental Health Policy. Policy Press, 2018.

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30

Supporting Children When Parents Separate: Embedding a Crisis Intervention Approach Within Family Justice, Education and Mental Health Policy. Policy Press, 2018.

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31

Murch, Mervyn. Supporting Children When Parents Separate: Embedding a Crisis Intervention Approach Within Family Justice, Education and Mental Health Policy. Policy Press, 2018.

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32

Deutsch, Robin M., and Abigail M. Judge. Overcoming Parent-Child Contact Problems: Family-Based Interventions for Resistance, Rejection, and Alienation. Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2016.

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33

Morgan-Owen, David G. Preparing for War. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198805199.003.0005.

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The period 1904–6 proved to be a fateful one for the CID. The government successfully divorced the Regular Army from its defensive duties and re-orientated it towards operations overseas—the necessary first step to producing a more coherent, complementary approach to imperial defence. Yet despite this change in military policy, the CID failed to become a forum in which the two services could debate and co-operate in the interests of producing a cohesive grand strategy. Political intervention thus merely changed the parameters within which quasi-independent naval and military strategies continued to compete, intersect, and diverge—to the detriment of overall British readiness for war.
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34

Sullivan, Kieran T., and Erika Lawrence. Introduction. Edited by Erika Lawrence and Kieran T. Sullivan. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199783267.013.19.

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Long-term committed intimate relationships such as marriage are an integral part of our lives and confer many benefits but many couples experience significant relationship distress and about half of all marriages end in divorce. The purpose of this edited volume is to showcase cutting-edge research on couple functioning and interventions, including the development of new guidelines for determining whether a given couple therapy is empirically supported, the relation between couple functioning and individual physical and psychological functioning (e.g., chronic pain, depression, anxiety), the role of genetics in interpersonal processes, best practices for the assessment, prevention, and treatment of couple dysfunction, and the relevance of couple functioning and couple therapy to the structure and utility of classification systems such as theDiagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) and the International Classification of Diseases (ICD).
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35

Ribbens McCarthy, Jane, Carol-Ann Hooper, and Val Gillies, eds. Family Troubles? Bristol University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.46692/9781447304456.

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As the everyday family lives of children and young people come to be increasingly defined as matters of public policy and concern, it is important to raise the question of how we can understand the contested terrain between 'normal' family troubles and troubled and troubling families. In this important, timely and thought-provoking publication, a wide range of contributors explore how 'troubles' feature in 'normal' families, and how the 'normal' features in 'troubled' families. Drawing on research on a wide range of substantive topics - including infant care, sibling conflict, divorce, disability, illness, migration and asylum-seeking, substance misuse, violence, kinship care, and forced marriage - the contributors aim to promote dialogue between researchers addressing mainstream family change and diversity in everyday lives, and those specialising in specific problems which prompt professional interventions. In tackling these contentious and difficult issues across a variety of topics, the book addresses a wide audience, including policy makers, service users and practitioners, as well as family studies scholars more generally who are interested in issues of family change.
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36

Sheppard, Eric. Heterodoxy as Orthodoxy: Prolegomenon for a Geographical Political Economy. Edited by Gordon L. Clark, Maryann P. Feldman, Meric S. Gertler, and Dariusz Wójcik. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198755609.013.9.

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For most geographers, thinking geographically about the economy means something very different than for mainstream/geographical economists: what is heterodox for the latter constitutes geographers’ orthodoxy. Nineteen propositions about geographical political economy demonstrate how thinking geographically disrupts core propositions about capitalism in mainstream economic theory. The spatiotemporality and relational nature of inter-sectoral commodity production, shaped by the socio-spatial dialectic, implies that commodity production generally is far from equilibrium, (re)produces uneven geographical development, and cannot be divorced from political processes. With respect to exchange, markets are socio-spatial constructs, profit rates are positive, free trade is inequalizing, and financialization matters. With respect to distribution, globalizing capitalism (re)produces socio-spatial inequality, an outcome modulated by the necessity of llabour politics and state intervention. Trajectories of globalizing capitalism co-evolve also with cultural and biophysical processes: its constitutional failure to deliver on the promise of equal opportunity for all makes it necessary to countenance more-than-capitalist alternatives.
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37

Zarling, Amie Langer, Rosaura Orengo-Aguayo, and Erika Lawrence. Violent Coercion in Intimate Relationships. Edited by Thomas J. Dishion and James Snyder. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199324552.013.31.

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This chapter defines violent coercion in romantic relationships as comprising threatening or controlling behaviors such as economic abuse and social isolation, dominance and intimidation, belligerence and humiliation, threats of physical violence, physical violence itself, and sexual violence. This type of coercion occurs in a broad range of intimate relationships—dating, cohabiting, engaged and newlywed couples, separated and divorced couples, and second and third marriages. Even mild and infrequent forms of violent coercion have negative consequences for victims, relationships, and children raised in these homes. There are few empirically supported interventions for violent coercion in committed relationships, and those that do exist are limited in their efficacy. This chapter reviews the wide variation in definitions of coercion in committed relationships, assesses the methods used to measure coercion in committed relationships, reviews traditional treatments and evaluates their efficacy, and delineates recent treatment advances and outline directions for future research.
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38

Sherwood, Yvonne, ed. The Bible and Feminism. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198722618.001.0001.

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This groundbreaking book breaks with established canons and resists some of the stereotypes of feminist biblical studies. A wide range of contributors—from the Netherlands, Germany, Norway, East Africa, South Africa, Argentina, Israel, Hong Kong, the US, the UK, and Iran—showcase new methodological and theoretical movements such as feminist materialisms; intersectionality; postidentitarian ?nomadic? politics; gender archaeology; lived religion; and theories of the human and the posthuman. They engage a range of social and political issues, including migration and xenophobia; divorce and family law; abortion; ?pinkwashing?; the neoliberal university; the second amendment; AIDS and sexual trafficking; Tianamen Square and 9/11; and the politics of ?the veil?. Foundational figures in feminist biblical studies work alongside new voices and contributors from a range of disciplines in conversations with the Bible that go well beyond the expected canon-within-the-canon assumed to be of interest to feminist biblical scholars. Moving beyond the limits of a text-orientated model of reading, they look at how biblical texts were actualized in the lives of religious revolutionaries, such as Joanna Southcott and Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz. In important interventions—made all the more urgent in the context of the Trump presidency and Brexit—they make biblical traditions speak to gun legislation, immigration, the politics of abortion, and Roe v. Wade.
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39

James, Stewart, and George Cukor. The Philadelphia story. 2017.

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