| For years, family courts have leaned on the controversial theory of “parental alienation” to discredit allegations of child abuse.
Parental alienation is a fairly recent idea, conceived in the 1980s by a psychiatrist who argued that divorcing mothers, desperate to win custody suits, were brainwashing children against their fathers.
So in multiple cases where kids said their fathers abused them, the dad has denied the accusations and accused the mom of manipulation. Judges have leaned on alienation theory to send kids to “reunification programs” — and into the custody of their alleged abusers.
Alienation has never been accepted as a psychiatric disorder by the medical establishment. Yet today, mental-health practitioners across the United States assess and treat it, particularly those who specialize in custody cases.
A new investigation from Insider, in partnership with the nonprofit newsroom Type Investigations, dives into this phenomenon and the industry that’s popped up around it. |