The Long-Term Effects of Parental Alienation on Adult Children: A Qualitative Research Study
- A. Baker
- Psychology, Medicine
- 1 July 2005
These seven themes provide the first glimpse into the lives of adult children of parental alienation, including low self-esteem, depression, drug/alcohol abuse, lack of trust, alienation from own children, divorce, and other.
Improving parent involvement programs and practice: A qualitative study of teacher perceptions.
- A. Baker
- Education
- 1997
Parental Alienation, DSM-V, and ICD-11
- W. Bernet, Wilfrid von Boch-Galhau, A. Baker, S. Morrison
- Psychology
- 11 March 2010
Parental alienation is an important phenomenon that mental health professionals should know about and thoroughly understand, especially those who work with children, adolescents, divorced adults, and…
The Home Instruction Program for Preschool Youngsters (HIPPY).
- A. Baker, C. Piotrkowski, J. Brooks-Gunn
- PsychologyThe Future of children
- 1999
The findings from a series of interconnected research studies, including a two-site, two-cohort evaluation in New York and Arkansas, a one-site case study, and a three-site qualitative study, reveal considerable variation in parent involvement in HIPPY.
Behaviors and Strategies Employed in Parental Alienation
- A. Baker, Douglas Darnall
- Psychology
- 31 May 2006
Abstract A survey study was conducted of adults who self reported being targets of parental alienation. Three research questions were addressed: (1) What alienating strategies were identified by the…
The quality of evaluations of foster parent training: An empirical review
- T. Festinger, A. Baker
- Psychology
- 1 December 2013
Understanding barriers to parent involvement in Head Start: a research-community partnership
- Faith Lamb-Parker, C. Piotrkowski, A. Baker, S. Kessler-Sklar, Beryl Clark, Lenore Peay
- Psychology
- 1 March 2001
Adult recall of childhood psychological maltreatment: Definitional strategies and challenges
- A. Baker
- Psychology
- 1 July 2009
Patterns of Parental Alienation Syndrome: A Qualitative Study of Adults Who were Alienated from a Parent as a Child
- A. Baker
- Psychology
- 2006
A qualitative retrospective study was conducted on 40 adults who experienced parental alienation as a child. Individuals participated in one-hour, semi-structured interviews. Audiotapes were…
Parental alienation, DSM-5, and ICD-11: response to critics.
Four common misunderstandings regarding parental alienation are addressed: that there is a lack of research to support it as a diagnosis; that adopting parental alienation as adiagnosis will lead to serious adverse consequences; that the advocates of parental alienated are driven by self-serving or malevolent motives; and that Richard Gardner should be criticized for self-publishing his description of parental alienation syndrome.
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