Posts Tagged ‘Divorce Child Custody’

This is the latest news from around the blogespere. We keep you up to date with all you need to know regarding your child custody rights.

Child Custody for Fathers – Dads – Husbands – Custody Warriors.com

Child custody for fathers Child custody laws for dads and husbands. ….. Child Custody News – Jon Gosselin’s epiphany: Reality TV not good for my kids

Tiger Woods gives us pause to contemplate prenups and child custody

Examiner.com‎21 hours ago‎
What that will do as far as the now-famous prenuptial is concerned (in Texas, it’s known as a ‘premarital agreement’), and more importantly, child custody

Settlement reached between parties in Buske divorce, child custody, support

St. Clair RecordAmelia Flood‎16 hours ago‎
The settlement does not resolve issues of child custody or child support. There is no notation in the case file of when the next hearing will take place in
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Divorce can be an earth-shattering event for children, creating feelings of loss, confusion, fear, anger, and resentment. Several recent psychological studies indicate that children can experience these effects for years, and it can affect how children, once grown, approach their own marriages and childrearing.

In addition to the psychological effects, divorce can have economic effects on children. Children often suffer a change after a divorce, sometimes financially, almost always emotionally.

Divorce is common in the United States. A quoted statistic is that “almost half of all marriages end in divorce.” That leaves a lot of children enduring the effects of divorce.

Child custody laws throughout the United States seek to provide some sense of order to the disruption of divorce and separation in efforts to smooth over this transition from a unified, nuclear family to a two-household family, with the spouses/parents living separate and apart.

One parent, generally termed the “custodial parent,” will receive custody of the child(ren) from the court. The child(ren) will live for the most part with this custodial parent and visit with the “noncustodial parent” for short periods of time (hours or days). One exception to this rule is the “joint physical custody” arrangement.

Under joint physical custody, the time is divided more evenly or equitably (not always the same thing, so ask your attorney what may happen in your particular case). The child(ren) will spend significant amounts of time with each parent, often weeks at a time. Obviously, should the parents live in different states or towns – or sometimes even just school districts – a joint physical custody arrangement can be quite complicated for both the children and the parents.

source: www.divorcesupport.com

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