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Susan J. Gamache 《Family Court Review》2015,53(3):378-387
Interdisciplinary teams provide an unparalleled opportunity for peacemaking in families within the consensual dispute resolution continuum. This interdisciplinary environment was born out of the integration of Collaborative Law, in which lawyers limit the scope of their services to settlement by way of a signed agreement, and Collaborative Divorce, a team approach to divorce services that includes a lawyer for each party along with a Collaborative Divorce Coach for each party, a neutral financial specialist, and a neutral child specialist. Taken together, Interdisciplinary Collaborative Practice supports the resolution of legal issues out of court as well as addressing any emotional, relational, or behavioral problems that create obstacles to the successful resolution of the separation process.
- Key Points for the Family Court Community:
- Collaborative Practice creates legal representation in a consensual environment limiting services to settlement negotiations by way of a written agreement.
- The International Academy of Collaborative Professionals includes 5,000 members in twenty‐five countries.
- Legal representation in a consensual environment together with interdisciplinary teams create endless possibilities for dispute resolution processes.
- Collaborative Lawyers, Collaborative Divorce Coaches, child specialists, and financial specialists can create custom‐fit interdisciplinary teams that work together out of court to support families through marital transition.
- Interdisciplinary teams are family centric, bridging appropriate disciplines and resources to the needs of the family to address the vast majority of divorce‐related problems.
- Divorcing families are moving targets, learning and evolving through the process.
- Therapeutic teams support families with more complex relational, emotional, and mental health problems to find resolutions out of court.
- Divorce is a mainstream event in Western culture; we need supportive processes to encourage the best possible outcomes for all family members, especially the children.
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Over the last several years, criminal justice education In the United States has increased dramatically. Much of this growth
has been in response to the needs of an evolving criminal justice field. However, there is some concern among professionals
that the criminal justice system needs to be impacted more directly, and that institutions of higher learning need to be impetus
for this change. To complete this task, curricula in higher education programs need to become more relevant to the needs of
the system, while not ignoring the student of the educational system. This article examines the use of competency-based education
(CBE) as a model that will serve the criminal justice student of today and the criminal justice system of tomorrow. 相似文献
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This paper presents a critically reflexive account of the experiences of a group of researchers at the Canadian Women's Movement Archives. Drawing on the work of Sara Ahmed, Claire Colebrook, and Victoria Hesford, it argues that the researchers shared intensely embodied and emotional encounters with the archival record of lesbians’ struggles to create and define community. These encounters encouraged the researchers to explore the potential of their own sexual subjectivities. Their deepened understanding of the complex lesbian and feminist past provided them with the desire to reconsider the collective promise of ‘lesbian’ and ‘bisexual’ for their own future community. 相似文献
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Gamache Jordan Herd Toria Allen Joseph King-Casas Brooks Kim-Spoon Jungmeen 《Journal of youth and adolescence》2022,51(9):1798-1814
Journal of Youth and Adolescence - As adolescence is a time characterized by rapid changes in social relationships as well as an increase in risk-taking behaviors, this prospective longitudinal... 相似文献
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