Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Parental_alienation> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 22 of
22
with 100 items per page.
- Parental_alienation abstract "Parental alienation is an alleged social dynamic where one parent is seen as sabotaging the relationship of the other parent with the child - sometimes euphemistically called "aggressive parenting", generally occurring after divorce or separation. This happens physically by boycotting or "hijacking" any contact between them, but also psychologically by bullying the other parent away and by potentially influencing the child. This will lead up to a situation where ultimately the child itself expresses hatred that may appear unjustified or unreasonably strong dislike of one parent, making access by the rejected parent even more difficult or impossible. The alienating parent can now hide very well that he/she was solely responsible for this destruction of the relationship with the other parent. Characteristics with the child, such as lack of empathy and warmth between the rejected parent and child are other indicators. Critics point out that these behaviors on the part of the child may accurately reflect the child's own opinions, and that children are not neutral actors when parents divorce. This alleged "syndrome" was once fashionable and gained currency in some courts, but is now widely understood to be debunked. Proponents believe it is one of the most severe forms of child abuse, rooted in a pathological desire of the alienating parent to obtain total control over the target parent, combined with a pathological fear of abandonment, that they try to avert by treating the child as a possession and a weapon against the target parent, thus parentifying the child into the role of a caretaker for the emotions of the alienating parent. They need the attention of the child for themselves alone. In severe cases, the alienating parent almost certainly has a cluster B personality disorder.Although initially thought to be an outcome of difficult divorces, parental alienation or estrangement between parents and their adolescent or adult children is becoming an increasingly common phenomenon in affluent modern society. An inflated sense of entitlement and an increasing level of narcissism in college students are thought to be contributing to parental alienation in families with and without a history of divorce.".
- Parental_alienation wikiPageID "684628".
- Parental_alienation wikiPageRevisionID "606810328".
- Parental_alienation hasPhotoCollection Parental_alienation.
- Parental_alienation subject Category:Child_abuse.
- Parental_alienation subject Category:Divorce_law.
- Parental_alienation subject Category:Domestic_violence.
- Parental_alienation subject Category:Family_law.
- Parental_alienation subject Category:Parenting.
- Parental_alienation subject Category:Shunning.
- Parental_alienation comment "Parental alienation is an alleged social dynamic where one parent is seen as sabotaging the relationship of the other parent with the child - sometimes euphemistically called "aggressive parenting", generally occurring after divorce or separation. This happens physically by boycotting or "hijacking" any contact between them, but also psychologically by bullying the other parent away and by potentially influencing the child.".
- Parental_alienation label "Alienacja rodzicielska".
- Parental_alienation label "Loyaliteitsmisbruik".
- Parental_alienation label "Parental alienation".
- Parental_alienation label "النفور من الآباء".
- Parental_alienation sameAs Loyaliteitsmisbruik.
- Parental_alienation sameAs Alienacja_rodzicielska.
- Parental_alienation sameAs m.032s5w.
- Parental_alienation sameAs Q1949144.
- Parental_alienation sameAs Q1949144.
- Parental_alienation wasDerivedFrom Parental_alienation?oldid=606810328.
- Parental_alienation isPrimaryTopicOf Parental_alienation.