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CCE or LFA. 1. If a certain number of issues are raised (3 or more), it is likely that a CCE is needed. 2. If legal custody and parenting time recommendations are requested, it is a CCE. 3. Relocation being a more complicated matter is a CCE.
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CCE or LFA 1. If a certain number of issues are raised (3 or more), it is likely that a CCE is needed. 2. If legal custody and parenting time recommendations are requested, it is a CCE. 3. Relocation being a more complicated matter is a CCE. 4. Two or fewer specific custody factors, as long as custody and detailed parenting time recommendations are not involved, is an LFA.
Suggested Reading • Expanding Forensically Informed Evaluations and Therapeutic Interventions in Family Court, Lynne Kenney Markan and David K. Weinstock, Family Court Review, Vol. 43 No. 3, July 2005, 466-480. • The Treating Expert: A Hybrid Role with Firm Boundaries, Lyn R. Greenberg and Jonathan Gould, Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 2001, Vol. 32, No. 5, 469-478.
Suggested Reading • Irreconcilable Conflict Between Therapeutic and Forensic Roles, Stuart A. Greenberg and Daniel W. Shuman, Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 1997, Vol. 28, No. 1, 50-57. • Children Resisting Postseparation Contact With a Parent: Concepts, Controversies, and Conundrums, Barbara Jo Fidler and Nicholas Bala, Family Court Review, Vol. 48, No. 1, January 2010, 10-47.
Online/ AFCC Resources www.afccnet.org/resources/standards_practice.asp www.afccnet.org/pdfs/Guidelines%20for%20Court%20Involved%20Therapy%20AFCC.pdf Special Alienation issue of Family Court Review, July 2010