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6 J. Child Custody 1 (2009)

handle is hein.journals/wjcc6 and id is 1 raw text is: 


Journal of Child Custody, 6:1-7, 2009                   *iRoutledge
Copyright ) Ginger Calloway and Robert E. Erard            Taylor&FrancisGroup
ISSN: 1537-9418 print/1537-940X online
DOI: 10.1080/15379410902894825



           Introduction to the Special Issue
           on  Attachment and Child Custody


                         GINGER CALLOWAY
                    Private Practice, Raleigh, North Carolina
                          ROBERT E. ERARD
            Psychological Institutes ofMichigan, P.C., Franklin, Michigan



The  idea of producing a Special Issue on attachment developed gradually as
it became increasingly evident that this sometimes rather arcane area of study
in the field of developmental psychology has critical importance for anyone
who  wishes to understand parent-child relationships and their developmen-
tal consequences  in depth. Although the centrality of attachment in child
development  has been  a subject of extensive theoretical work and empirical
investigation for some four decades, the longstanding failure of academic
and  applied psychologists to converse in similar languages, much less avidly
study each other's work, led to the unfortunate consequence that a treasure
trove of scientific work that could hardly be more relevant to child custody
evaluations was for many years all but ignored by forensic psychologists.
     As obvious as it seems that a detailed understanding of the developmen-
tal processes attendant to attachment and loss should be close to the heart of
any  effort to appreciate the experience of a child facing parental divorce
or separation, most applied psychologists naively assumed that their years
of clinical experience adequately equipped  them  to address these issues
without much  further formal study. This is not to say that terms like attach-
ment, bonding, and even  securely attached or insecurely attached did
not often find their way into child custody reports, but all too often their use
was  casual, ill-informed, and even misleading. For example, few custody
evaluators recognized the distinction between a highly dependent or demon-
stratively affectionate relationship between a parent and child and a secure
attachment. Even  fewer seemed  cognizant of the pitfalls of trying to assess
the quality of parent-child attachment when the child is under no particular
stress or when the attachment system is not activated.

    Address correspondence to Ginger Calloway, 855 Washington St., Suite 200, Raleigh, NC
27605-3270. E-mail: gcphd@bellsouth.net

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