Decisions of Greek Courts Securing the Right of Parent–Child Communication and Their Determinants
(This article belongs to the Section Forensic Medicine)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Search
- (1)
- The gender of the parents and the number and the gender of the children;
- (2)
- The judicial decision (acceptance of the prevention of communication or not);
- (3)
- The strategies followed to prevent communication, as described in the judicial decision;
- (4)
- Reference to the term “parental alienation” in the judicial decision;
- (5)
- The effects on child psychology and the ways of dealing with alienation, as described in the judicial decision.
2.2. Statistical Analysis
- (i).
- Data in the cells were frequencies or counts of cases rather than percentages.
- (ii).
- Levels (or categories) of the variables were mutually exclusive.
- (iii).
- Each subject contributed data to one and only one cell in the χ2.
- (iv).
- The study groups were independent.
- (v).
- There are two variables, and both were measured as categories, usually at the nominal level. However, data could be ordinal data.
- (vi).
- The value of the cell expected should be 5 or more in at least 80% of the cells, and no cell should have an expected of less than 1.
3. Results
3.1. Descriptive Findings
3.2. Associations
4. Discussion
- (1)
- An affinity for one parent relating to age, gender, common interests, or a prolonged absence of the parent, which is considered relatively normal, sometimes even before divorce;
- (2)
- An alignment (arising from a loyalty conflict) with a parent as a coping mechanism to the parental separation and mild rejection of the other parent;
- (3)
- A realistic estrangement (justified rejection), usually in connection with interpersonal violence and/or child abuse;
- (4)
- Alienation (unjustified rejection) where one parent may influence or pressure the child into believing the other parent is bad, wrong, or dangerous, although they are not, which results in the child expressing fear, anger, resistance, or rejection toward the other parent.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ways of Preventing Communication | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Direct Interference | Indirect Interference | Both Ways | p | |
Number of children | ||||
1 | 18 (81.8%) | 7 (46.7%) | 4 (44.4%) | 0.041 ‡ |
>1 | 4 (18.2%) | 8 (53.3%) | 5 (55.6%) | |
Age (years) | ||||
0–6 | 8 (47.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (12.5%) | 0.093 § |
6.5–12 | 7 (41.2%) | 7 (77.8%) | 5 (62.5%) | |
12.5+ | 2 (11.8%) | 2 (22.2%) | 2 (25.0%) | |
Gender | ||||
Male | 8 (44.4%) | 3 (30.0%) | 2 (40.0%) | 0.881 § |
Female | 10 (55.6%) | 7 (70.0%) | 3 (60.0%) | |
Parent preventing the communication | ||||
Father | 3 (16.7%) | 7 (53.8%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0.009 § |
Mother | 15 (83.3%) | 6 (46.2%) | 8 (100.0%) | |
Parent/grandparent prevented from communication | ||||
Father | 12 (66.7%) | 6 (40.0%) | 8 (88.9%) | 0.083 § |
Mother | 3 (16.7%) | 7 (46.7%) | 0 (0.0%) | |
Grandparents | 3 (16.7%) | 2 (13.3%) | 1 (11.1%) | |
Same gender as the parent preventing the communication | ||||
No | 8 (47.1%) | 3 (42.9%) | 6 (75.0%) | 0.418 § |
Yes | 9 (52.9%) | 4 (57.1%) | 2 (25.0%) | |
Mention of parental alienation | ||||
No | 18 (50.0%) | 14 (38.9%) | 4 (11.1%) | 0.040 § |
Yes | 4 (36.4%) | 2 (18.2%) | 5 (45.5%) | |
Psycological effects on children | ||||
Internalization | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (60.0%) | 2 (40.0%) | 0.615 § |
Feelings concerning relationship with parents | 2 (22.2%) | 4 (44.4%) | 3 (33.3%) | |
Decision | ||||
Prevention accepted | 15 (60.0%) | 4 (16.0%) | 6 (24.0%) | 0.028 § |
Prevention not accepted | 7 (31.8%) | 12 (54.5%) | 3 (13.6%) |
Decision | |||
---|---|---|---|
Prevention Accepted | Prevention Not Accepted | p | |
Number of children | |||
1 | 18 (58.1%) | 13 (41.9%) | 0.390 † |
>1 | 8 (44.4%) | 10 (55.6%) | |
Age (years) | |||
0–6 | 7 (70.0%) | 3 (30.0%) | 0.561 § |
6.5–12 | 10 (50.0%) | 10 (50.0%) | |
12.5+ | 3 (42.9%) | 4 (57.1%) | |
Gender | |||
Male | 10 (62.5%) | 6 (37.5%) | 0.335 † |
Female | 9 (45.0%) | 11 (55.0%) | |
Parent preventing the communication | |||
Father | 6 (50.0%) | 6 (50.0%) | 0.742 † |
Mother | 17 (56.7%) | 13 (43.3%) | |
Parent prevented from communication | |||
Father | 16 (59.3%) | 11 (40.7%) | >0.999 § |
Mother | 6 (54.5%) | 5 (45.5%) | |
Grandparents | 3 (50.0%) | 3 (50.0%) | |
Same gender as the parent preventing the communication | |||
No | 12 (66.7%) | 6 (33.3%) | 0.500 † |
Yes | 9 (52.9%) | 8 (47.1%) | |
Mention of parental alienation | |||
No | 19 (48.7%) | 20 (51.3%) | 0.501 † |
Yes | 7 (63.6%) | 4 (36.4%) | |
Psychological effects on child | |||
Internalization | 5 (83.3%) | 1 (16.7%) | 0.035 † |
Feelings concerning relationship with parents | 2 (20.0%) | 8 (80.0%) |
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Koukoulis, A.-N.; Tsellou, M.; Rougkala, V.; Bacopoulou, F.; Papadodima, S. Decisions of Greek Courts Securing the Right of Parent–Child Communication and Their Determinants. Healthcare 2022, 10, 2522. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122522
Koukoulis A-N, Tsellou M, Rougkala V, Bacopoulou F, Papadodima S. Decisions of Greek Courts Securing the Right of Parent–Child Communication and Their Determinants. Healthcare. 2022; 10(12):2522. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122522
Chicago/Turabian StyleKoukoulis, Andreas-Nikolaos, Maria Tsellou, Vasiliki Rougkala, Flora Bacopoulou, and Stavroula Papadodima. 2022. "Decisions of Greek Courts Securing the Right of Parent–Child Communication and Their Determinants" Healthcare 10, no. 12: 2522. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122522
APA StyleKoukoulis, A. -N., Tsellou, M., Rougkala, V., Bacopoulou, F., & Papadodima, S. (2022). Decisions of Greek Courts Securing the Right of Parent–Child Communication and Their Determinants. Healthcare, 10(12), 2522. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122522