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February 26, 2010
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Child Custody News

 

Book Helps Turn Custody Battles Into Parenting Partnerships

SAN JOSE, Calif., January 29, 2002 — Divorcing families have a better chance of having a positive outcome for children and parents if they use mediation without judges and lawyers, rather than costly child custody court battles, claims Child Custody: Achieving a Parenting Partnership, a book to be released in the spring by Resource Publications, Inc. With more than half of all marriages likely to end in divorce, a process to guide divorcing families toward positive results is necessary, the authors write. This process should be governed by rules set forth in a contract to be signed by the divorcing couple in agreement to become “parenting partners.”

The book says parenting partners should “work together cooperatively and supportively in a businesslike manner to share the responsibilities and benefits of involved parenting.”  “We have developed a process that guides divorcing families toward divorcing in a manner that does not leave the family shattered and the family members so wounded that they never recover,” the Dimicks write. Also, by having a written contract, divorced couples will have “clear-cut rules to live by as they continue to explore and negotiate better ways to meet changes ahead,” the authors write. This contract governs two major areas of concern: financial planning and parent sharing, they add.

Child Custody takes divorced couples through the divorce and parenting partner processes step by step, using questionnaires, descriptions of various scenarios, and lists. It discusses such typically sensitive and controversial issues as what to do with the marital home, how to divide marital assets, debt payment, child support, discipline, school involvement, and how to handle celebrations and family traditions.  Also, it contains stories and examples based on real situations that divorced couples have gone through and provides a list of recommended readings. This step-by-step approach “integrates the newest research with our own 20 years of clinical practice working with divorcing and divorced families,” the authors say.

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Did You Know?    
 
 
Child Custody Joint custody is a court order whereby custody of a child is awarded to both parties.
Joint custody is a court order whereby custody of a child is awarded to both parties. Many states recognize two forms of joint custody: joint physical custody, and joint legal custody. In joint physical custody, which is also known as joint physical care, actual lodging and care of the child is shared according to a court-ordered custody schedule. In many cases, the term 'visitation' is no longer used in these circumstances. In joint legal custody, both parents share the ability to have access to educational, health, and other records, and have equal decision-making status where the welfare of the child is concerned.

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News about Child Custody cases in Minnesota and nationwide:

Ensign Brings Child Custody Protection Act To Senate Floor
Washington, D.C. – Senator John Ensign brought the Child Custody Protection Act to the floor of the United States Senate for debate today. The legi...
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Grandparents in Controversial Child Custody Case Not
Grandparents in Controversial Child Custody Case Not "Public Figures"

VIRGINIA -- In mid-October a panel of the U.S. Cour...

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Child Custody Terms

 


Today's Terms

Sole custody

Definition:
Sole custody grants one parent the right to make all legal and physical custody decisions.

Arbitration

Definition:
Arbitration is the process when the spouses decide to resolve their differences outside of court with the help of a third party arbitrator.

Limited divorce

Definition:
Limited divorce is synonymous to separation and entails the termination of cohabitation.

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Child Custody Resources

 


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Child Custody Hot Topics

 


Topics Related to Child Custody:

  • Legal Custody
  • Physical Custody
  • Sole Custody
  • Joint Custody
  • Child Support
  • Divorce

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Minnesota Child-Custody Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need an Child-Custody attorney you should contact our Child-Custody Attorney as soon as possible:

  • Andover
  • Anoka
  • Austin
  • Bemidji
  • Brainerd
  • Burnsville
  • Circle Pines
  • Cottage Grove
  • Eden Prairie
  • Elk River
  • Faribault
  • Hastings
  • Lakeville
  • Mankato
  • Minneapolis
  • Moorhead
  • Osseo
  • Owatonna
  • Rochester
  • Saint Cloud
  • Saint Paul
  • Stillwater
  • Winona
 


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