28-12-2011, 15:02
Hier weitere Details zur österreichischen Studie: "Doppelresidenz – Eine sinnvolle Option"
Und noch eine US-Studie mit dem Namen "The Divided World of the Child:
Divorce and Long-Term Psychosocial Adjustment", Volltext: http://www.sethschwartz.info/pdfs/Divide..._Child.pdf
"The present results have provided substantial support for the “divided world” thesis (Finley, 2006; Marquardt, 2005). The strongest support for this thesis comes not only from indices of perceived parenting, but also from indices of emerging-adult psychosocial functioning and of troubled ruminations – long-term feelings of anger, pain, regret, and hurt. Clearly, a postdivorce arrangement where one parent resides within the child’s primary family system -- while the other is marginalized or severed from that family system -- does not fulfill the best interests of the child (cf. Finley, 2002). The present findings thus suggest that divorce decrees that include joint physical custody may represent one way to reduce the distress associated with the “divided world” and to enhance quality of life for children of divorce (cf. Warshak, 2007). The present results also suggest that, the more the child’s post-divorce life resembles that of an intact family, the better adjusted children of divorce are likely to be as they enter adulthood."
Und noch eine US-Studie mit dem Namen "The Divided World of the Child:
Divorce and Long-Term Psychosocial Adjustment", Volltext: http://www.sethschwartz.info/pdfs/Divide..._Child.pdf
"The present results have provided substantial support for the “divided world” thesis (Finley, 2006; Marquardt, 2005). The strongest support for this thesis comes not only from indices of perceived parenting, but also from indices of emerging-adult psychosocial functioning and of troubled ruminations – long-term feelings of anger, pain, regret, and hurt. Clearly, a postdivorce arrangement where one parent resides within the child’s primary family system -- while the other is marginalized or severed from that family system -- does not fulfill the best interests of the child (cf. Finley, 2002). The present findings thus suggest that divorce decrees that include joint physical custody may represent one way to reduce the distress associated with the “divided world” and to enhance quality of life for children of divorce (cf. Warshak, 2007). The present results also suggest that, the more the child’s post-divorce life resembles that of an intact family, the better adjusted children of divorce are likely to be as they enter adulthood."