
Defusing
the
High-Conflict Divorce
Bernard Gaulier, Ph.D., Judith
Margerum, Ph.D.,
Jerome A. Price, M.A., James Windell, M.A.
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“This is a
book packed with anecdotal and practical applications... a helpful
resource and readable book for professionals in all disciplines who may
find themselves involved in helping to turn around a potentially
high-conflict divorce into a healing and empowering process in which all
members of the family are able to receive the support and help they
need.”
The
Family Journal
April 2008, Volume 16:2
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"For
the reader with little experience in the field of working with divorcing
couples, this book is a great introduction to the more difficult aspects
of the field. For a more experienced reader, the book reminds us of the
issues that high-conflict divorce raises... useful to anyone who is
working with a high-conflict couple dealing with long-standing issues."
—
PsycCRITIQUES - APA Review of Books
October 2007, Vol. 52, Release 41, Article 12
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"A
must read for every attorney, judge, mediator and everyone in the mental
health field. This book is a clear, concise guide for all professionals
working with high-conflict divorce as well as for all those going
through a divorce themselves. Much can be learned about the dysfunctions
in the court system and in the mental health system and about what
really works."
—
Cloe Madanes
Author, Sex, Love and Violence and
The Secret Meaning of Money
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"Defusing
the High-Conflict Divorce is not only an excellent work but a badly
needed work. The topics are very timely and it will be of great
assistance to attorneys, judges, behavioral specialists and parents. I
particularly like the section on 'Which Interventions Work and Which
Don't?' It will go a long way toward protecting children and helping us
all realize that children come first."
—
Eugene Arthur Moore, Judge of Probate
Circuit Court of the County of Oakland, Michigan
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"This
thoughtful, trenchant, and compassionate approach… will be of
enormous assistance not only to therapists, but to attorneys, judges,
and other professionals involved with divorce-related matters… Numerous
ways to …enable both generations, parents and children, to
recover from the pain of the past, and to chart a more civil, healthy and
respectful path into the future." —
Brad Sachs, Ph.D., Psychologist,
Author, The
Good Enough Child
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"This
marvelous guide...
is organized around major sections that address the fundamental issue of
why people have high-conflict divorces, patterns of dysfunction in
high-conflict divorces, understanding the legal and mental health
context of the problem, and the most critical section, successful
interventions that teach therapeutic professionals how best to get
involved and assist those caught up in the rancor of difficult divorces. —
Library Journal Review
November 15, 2006
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