Edited by Philip M. Stahl and Leslie M. Drozd. New York: The Haworth Press, Inc., 2006. 181 pages. $150.00, hardcover; $45.95, paperback.
Relocation Issues in Child Custody Cases addresses one of the most challenging matters that child custody evaluators encounter in a mobile society. The chapters in this book were published as articles in the 2006 Journal of Child Custody (JCC). The articles were edited by two psychologists: Dr. Leslie M. Drozd, who is Editor in Chief of the JCC, and Dr. Philip M. Stahl, who served as a guest editor for the issue. Stahl's goal was to produce a book that has “a multi-disciplinary tone for a multi-disciplinary audience.” The authors include psychology professors, a law professor, practicing attorneys, and judges.
One of the pivotal cases in parental relocation, In re Marriage of LaMusga,1 is examined by Stahl, who served as the child custody expert during the adjudication. In this case, the California Supreme Court held that a custodial parent does not have a presumptive legal right to relocate. That is, a court may reevaluate a custody agreement if a noncustodial parent is able to show that the custodial parent's relocation will be detrimental to the children.
Psychology professors William Fabricius and Sanford Braver update their 2003 study2 of the impact of parental relocation. The authors’ findings remain unchanged: maternal relocation is associated with, but not necessarily a cause of, “negative impacts on children's long-term relationships with their fathers, their adjustment to their parents’ divorce, and their ongoing experience of their parents’ relationship.” This is true, assert the researchers, even when controlling for parental conflict and domestic violence. They contend that relocation does not necessarily reduce parent conflict and that additional research on the effects of parental relocation on children is needed.
Trends among the courts are examined by law professor Linda Elrod, who says that courts are moving toward a case-by-case application of the best-interests-of-the-child standard, and away from presumptions that either parent has the right to move unless shown otherwise. She includes a helpful summary chart of each state's relocation statutes, including whether the presumption is for or against a relocating parent.
Psychologists William Austin and Jonathan Gould examine three aspects of performing custody evaluations that involve parental relocation: predicting potential harm to the child for each parent's proposed parenting plan or relocation; using an investigative model to identify real-life factors; and comparing real-life factors against predictive factors. The authors offer recommendations for suitable alternative parenting plans based on those factors. They propose that the mirror image of the best-interests standard is the least detrimental alternative. That is, the effects of custody and divorce on a child are inherently negative, and the task of any custody agreement is to mitigate such negative effects.
The potential damage to the child due to a parent's relocating or making alternative parenting plans should be evaluated systematically, contends Austin. He describes seven factors that are relevant to predicting the degree of risk for potential harm to the child. They are the child's age; the geographical distance of the relocation; the degree of involvement by the non-relocating parent; the degree of parental conflict (including history of domestic violence); the temperament of the child; the degree of stability of the relocating parent; and the ability of the relocating parent to support the child's relationship to the other parent. Austin's list will be helpful to mental health evaluators who contemplate these matters when performing child custody evaluations.
Stahl's article on avoiding bias is aimed at both evaluators and judges. He references the article of Thomas Gutheil and Robert Simon3 on experts’ biases and extrapolates from it to identify several potential areas of bias in evaluating and adjudicating relocation cases. Stahl agrees somewhat with the other authors that evaluators should not decide the ultimate issue (for or against one parent or another) in these cases; rather, evaluations will be most helpful to the court when they present the family dynamics and analyze data that are specific to a particular family.
Stahl advises that three sets of recommendations be presented to the judge, which would allow the court to make recommendations regardless of the ultimate finding: The recommendations should provide guidance to a judge who grants the modified custody petition, declines the modified petition, and chooses to compromise by rendering a blended solution. This approach will offer the judge options to consider, even if a parent withdraws a motion or chooses to relocate along with the other parties.
Judge Martha Lott's article is intended for her colleagues. She provides a simple yet solid method for judges to use in analyzing evidence in relocation cases. She asks judges to determine the child's developmental stage and primary needs; each parent's provision for the child; the location where those needs will best be met; the optimal parenting plan and its worst-case scenario; and the equitable considerations between the parents or what circumstances should be balanced so that the resulting custody agreement is as fair as possible.
This book is recommended to anyone in the field of child custody or of any discipline. Drozd and Stahl have accomplished their objective of providing insight into a most difficult subject to a wide range of professionals in various disciplines.
Acknowledgments
The author wishes to thank the Book Reviews Editor for her assistance with this review.
Footnotes
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Disclosures of financial or other conflicts of interest: None.
- American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law