How To Join CAVNET

Founded by Marc Dubin, Esq., former Special Counsel to the Justice Department's Office on Violence Against Women, CAVNET (Communities Against Violence Network) serves to bring together experts and advocates addressing violence against women, human rights, suicide, school violence, bullying, and crime victims with disabilities. We are a partner with Lifetime Television's End Violence Against Women Project and a recipient of a Ms. Foundation grant.To join, send a resume or brief bio to Marc Dubin, Esq, Executive Director, at mdubin@pobox.com. Marc may also be contacted by cell phone at 305-896-3000. See http://www.linkedin.com/pub/marc-dubin/4/4a0/180/ Follow Marc on Twitter:@ADAExpertise







Friday, October 17, 2014

Book: Domestic Violence and Child Custody

http://www.barrygoldstein.net/books/domestic-violence-abuse-and-child-custody

Domestic Violence Abuse and Child Custody

“Domestic Violence, Abuse and Child Custody is a multi-disciplinary book co-edited by (CAVNET members) Dr. Mo Therese Hannah and Barry Goldstein which was published in 2010.  It contains chapters by over 25 of the leading domestic violence custody experts from the United States and Canada including judges, lawyers, psychiatrists, psychologists, sociologists, journalists and domestic violence advocates.  The book brings together all of the most important research about custody and domestic violence in one place so that professionals and protective mothers can find the information they need.  This is especially helpful in supporting domestic violence custody cases.”

 “The book demonstrates that there is a serious problem with the way custody courts respond to domestic violence.  The courts are getting a large majority of these cases wrong and often catastrophically so.  One of the big problems is that courts first developed practices to respond to domestic violence at a time when no research was available.  At the time there was a popular assumption that domestic violence was caused by mental illness, substance abuse and the actions of the victim.  This led courts to rely on mental health professionals as if they were the experts.  We now have substantial research that demonstrates these assumptions were wrong and the standard practices are outdated and discredited.  Evaluators routinely use psychological tests that were not made for the populations seen in Family Courts and are based on probability assumptions that often don’t apply to the individual parties.  This often results in safe, protective mothers being pathologized.  The problem is exacerbated by a cottage industry of psychologists and lawyers who recognize that most contested custody are domestic violence cases and the abuser usually controls the family finances.  This means the best way to make large incomes is to support approaches that favor abusers.  Courts routinely treat these biased professionals as if they were neutral.  Even worse many courts learn misinformation from the cottage industry and repeat it in other cases.  Although there is now a substantial body of scientific research that could inform decisions and better protect children, few courts have started looking to this research in order to improve their response to domestic violence.  In many cases court professionals discredit true allegations of abuse based on information that is not probative and then fail to look for the patterns of coercive and controlling behaviors that would help them recognize domestic violence.  In many of the worst cases the courts use bad practices to deny true allegations of abuse and then punish mothers for trying to protect their children from dangerous abusers.  This book provides the information necessary to challenge these faulty practices.”

http://www.barrygoldstein.net:
Barry's new book, The Quincy Solution: Stop Domestic Violence and Save $500 Billion demonstrates how we can dramatically reduce domestic violence crime with proven practices.

Barry can be reached at Barryg78@aol.com




Visit www.cavnet.org

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