The term PAS does not applywhen children of divorce become alienated from a parent for reasons such as a parent's lack of interest in or rejection of the child; significant deficits in a rejected parent's functioning which may not rise to the level of abuse; or the child being subjected to bona
fide parental abuse or neglect.
Not exact matches
Likewise, an otherwise competent Evaluator who is however unfamiliar with
Parental Alienation, would very likely take the child's complaints about the Target Parent at face value without ruling out bona fide abuse and otherwise negative parental b
Parental Alienation, would very likely take the child's complaints about the Target Parent at face value without ruling out bona
fide abuse and otherwise negative
parental b
parental behavior.
Differentiating between
parental alienation syndrome and bona
fide abuse - neglect.
Gardner, R. A. (1999), Differentiating between the
parental alienation syndrome and bona
fide abuse / neglect.
Gardner and other researches include criteria for differentiating between
Parental Alienation and Bona
Fide abuse - neglect.