
Children's psychological adjustment following parental separation or divorce is a function of the characteristics of the custodial parent, as well as the degree of postdivorce parental cooperation. Over time, custody has shifted from fathers to mothers and currently to joint arrangements. In this retrospective chart review of family court clinic records we examined predictors of custody and visitation. Our work improves on previous studies by assessing a greater number of predictor variables. The results suggest that parental emotional instability, antisocial behavior, and low income all decrease chances of gaining custody. The findings also show that income predicts whether a father is recommended for visitation rights and access to his child or children. Furthermore, joint custody is not being awarded as a function of parental postdivorce cooperation. At issue is whether parental emotional stability, antisocial behavior, and income are appropriate markers for parenting capacity and whether visitation rights and joint custody are being decided in a way that serves the child's best interests.
Male, Parents, Adolescent, Family Conflict, Antisocial Personality Disorder, Young Adult, Divorce, Risk Factors, Child Custody, Adaptation, Psychological, Educational Status, Humans, Female, Affective Symptoms, Cooperative Behavior, Parent-Child Relations, Child, Poverty
Male, Parents, Adolescent, Family Conflict, Antisocial Personality Disorder, Young Adult, Divorce, Risk Factors, Child Custody, Adaptation, Psychological, Educational Status, Humans, Female, Affective Symptoms, Cooperative Behavior, Parent-Child Relations, Child, Poverty
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