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The Place for Custody Evaluations in Family Peacemaking
Author(s) -
Lund Mary Elizabeth
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
family court review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.171
H-Index - 4
eISSN - 1744-1617
pISSN - 1531-2445
DOI - 10.1111/fcre.12162
Subject(s) - peacemaking , settlement (finance) , mental health , child custody , psychology , adversarial system , best interests , mediation , therapeutic jurisprudence , process (computing) , family court , dispute resolution , conflict resolution , conciliation , law , public relations , political science , criminology , psychiatry , business , finance , computer science , payment , operating system
Custody evaluations can serve the dual purpose of providing neutral, objective information to the court while also contributing to the possibility of earlier settlement, which coincides with the therapeutic jurisprudence goal of more positive outcomes for children and families. Research suggests that most cases settle after custody evaluations. However, most of the literature is focused on the use of custody evaluations for litigation. Evaluators, attorneys, and mental health consultants can influence parents to focus more on children's needs and less on their conflict as they go through the evaluation process. This article urges family courts to develop processes and require professionals to learn skills needed for an interdisciplinary process to utilize evaluations in peacemaking. Key Points for the Family Court Community: All custody evaluation processes should aim to reduce and/or shorten children's exposure to parental conflict. Evaluators, attorneys, and mental health professional consultants should use the evaluation process to influence parents to be more aware of their children's needs and less invested in their adversarial positions. Evaluators should learn to write and orally present information and state opinions with consideration of the parents themselves as consumers of the custody evaluation as well as the court. Attorneys and mental health professional consultants should help clients review the report, process their emotional reactions, and consider their options for settlement versus litigation in terms of emotional and financial costs to the family. Court processes should be developed to contain the time and cost of custody evaluations and provide dispute resolution after custody evaluations.