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Home arrow Stepfamily Articles arrow Parental Alienation Syndrome arrow The Case of Parental Alienation
The Case of Parental Alienation Print E-mail

Parental Alienation is a phenomenon that develops almost exclusively as a by-product of separation and divorce.

The late Richard Gardner M.D. coined the term "Parental Alienation Syndrome, (PAS)" in the early 1970’s when he started to write about behaviors that he observed in children whose parents were divorcing. In particular, he noted that among some of these children, their once warm, loving and healthy relationship with both parents prior to divorce suddenly altered to the extent where one parent was loved and the other one was outwardly despised and rejected.

Upon further investigation, it was found that the "loved" or "preferred" parent had coerced the child into a partnership of maligning and denigrating the other parent. Therefore, PAS is a condition where one parent deliberately attempts to sever the relationship a child has with the other parent and in doing so, he or she engages the child in the vilification of the other parent.

Back in the 1970’s when PAS was first identified, mothers were most often reported as the parent responsible for this regrettable situation. Today, there appears to be an even split between mothers and fathers who initiate PAS in their children.

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