A COMPELLING NEED FOR MANDATED USE OF SUPERVISED VISITATION PROGRAMS |
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Authors: | Debra A. Clement |
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Affiliation: | Debra A. Clement is a member of the class of 1998 Hofstra University School of Law. She received her B.A. from Adelphi University in 1994. |
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Abstract: | Courts are frequently confronted by circumstances that do not justify termination of all contact with a parent, yet present legitimate concerns regarding the physical, emotional, or mental health of the child. Supervised visitation programs afford such parents and their children the opportunity to preserve the emotionally vital parent-child relationship while protecting the child, and sometimes the other parent, from harm. As the number of children deemed to be at risk continues to rise, demand for supervised visitation services steadily exceeds supply. This article proposes that all states should make supervised visitation programs universally available by enacting legislation that provides for their creation, regulation, and funding, together with clearly defined guidelines that mandate participation in supervised visitation programs whenever specific risk factors are present. |
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