Parentectomy: A narrative ethnography of 30 cases of parental alienation and what to do about it
Parentectomy: A narrative ethnography of 30 cases of parental alienation and what to do about it
When parents separate and divorce, kids come last in family law. Should children's welfare be measured in "billable hours"? Christine Giancarlo thinks kids come first and need both parents. Parentectomy moves us toward that goal... for the sake of the children.
Based on Dr. Giancarlo's peer-reviewed research study, Kids Come Last: The Effect of Family Law Involvement in Parental Alienation, this book tells, in their own voices, the stories of thirty loving, capable and dependable parents who, nonetheless, were removed from their children's lives. It is also the author's own journey through the devastation caused by parental alienation.
This book sheds light on an urgent social crisis, enabled by a broken family law system. An equitable and just model for eliminating this form of child abuse is proposed with an urgent plea for its implementation.
Author: Christine Giancarlo
Publisher: Tellwell Talent
Published: 12/26/2018
Pages: 582
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 2.21lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 1.44d
ISBN: 9780228808060
Review Citation(s):
Indie Reader 02/22/2019
About the Author
Giancarlo, Christine: - Christine Giancarlo is an applied anthropologist at Mount Royal University since 1992. She holds a Ph.D. in Human Services from Capella University, Minnesota, and an M.A. in Primatology from the University of Calgary, Alberta. Growing up with two loving parents, four brothers and being blessed with her own children, Devon and Carmen, inform her holistic perspective on the family. Christine resides in Calgary with her partner, Bert, and their dog, Gavin.
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