This may include a «Request to Enter
Default» and the «Declaration of
Default,» «Spousal Support Order,» a «Parenting Plan and Timesharing
Schedule» also referred to as «Child
Custody and Visitation Order,» and also, property and income declarations.
See the research and articles at http://www.thelizlibrary.org/liz/) So, given that there are just not all that many options to choose from in deciding upon a child
custody arrangement, and given that those options overwhelmingly will be constrained or even dictated by fairly obvious facts about the parties» circumstances such as work and school
schedules, or how far apart they live from each other, and similar considerations, one really has to query what all the painstaking attention to detail and «science» (or pretext to science) is all about if, when all is said and done, the decision will boil down to the application of a
default personal preference, and pragmatic ways of arranging
custody and visitation
schedules to accomplish this while avoiding liability for placing children into situations in which detriment too obviously or easily can be proved to be the direct result of the arrangement.