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Table of Contents
1. A great judicial fallacy
2. Defining the problem: representing a battered woman in divorce
3. Memory
4. Language is important to victims
5. Understanding the impact of violence on children
6. The attorney-client interview: its importance and implications
7. Pleading the case
8. The litigation continued
9. Using and choosing experts
10. Developing strategies
11. Family courts must demand science
12. The "Best Interest" standard versus changing the standard to assure child safety
13. The Intersection of forensic opinion and therapist testimony
14. Custody evaluations, therapy, child protection, and ethics
15. Mental health professionals take risks when evaluating children
16. Domestic abuse and child protection: is what we are doing working?
17. Conclusion: an open letter to a young lawyer: a critical look at the child custody system and what every mental health person should know about lawyers
18. Kids grow up.
2. Defining the problem: representing a battered woman in divorce
3. Memory
4. Language is important to victims
5. Understanding the impact of violence on children
6. The attorney-client interview: its importance and implications
7. Pleading the case
8. The litigation continued
9. Using and choosing experts
10. Developing strategies
11. Family courts must demand science
12. The "Best Interest" standard versus changing the standard to assure child safety
13. The Intersection of forensic opinion and therapist testimony
14. Custody evaluations, therapy, child protection, and ethics
15. Mental health professionals take risks when evaluating children
16. Domestic abuse and child protection: is what we are doing working?
17. Conclusion: an open letter to a young lawyer: a critical look at the child custody system and what every mental health person should know about lawyers
18. Kids grow up.