Abstract
Parenting arrangements arising from family court decisions can have lasting effects on Parent-Child relationships, which can affect children’s emotional and physical development. In this study, parenting arrangements, also known as custody arrangements, are examined in terms of time allocated to each parent for the legal (decision-making) and physical (parenting time) aspects of parenting arrangements. The study aimed to identify patterns between temporary and final court decisions on parenting arrangements. Primary data were collected over 3 weeks in 2022 from 652 parents ages 19-64, with a child ages 3-17, and a U.S. family court decision. An 85-item, online survey, created for this study, was completed by participants recruited via social media and selected through cross-sectional convenience sampling. Two publishable papers were produced. Paper One identified patterns in court decisions, finding a statistically significant association between temporary and final rulings in court decisions. An ANOVA analysis found parental alienating behaviors for the legal aspect, represented by the Rowlands Parental Alienating Scale (RPAS) total score, were not statistically significant. Another ANOVA found a negligible, though statistically significant, positive relationship between the RPAS total score and the physical aspect. Paper Two assessed percentages in final physical rulings, perceived conflict, and closeness based on the Child-Parent Relationship Scale-Short Form (CPRS-SF), before and after initiating the court matter. Results indicated a weak yet significant negative association between final parenting time and Parent-Child conflict and a moderate yet significant positive association between final physical parenting time and Parent-Child closeness. A mediation model revealed conflict was not directly or indirectly influenced by parental alienating behaviors. However, an association was identified between closeness and final physical rulings. Parents at all percentages of parenting time reported increased conflict and decreased closeness in their Parent-Child relationship before and after the family court decision. This dissertation makes an important contribution by examining parenting arrangements' legal and physical aspects, by percentages, in temporary and final court decisions. Results suggest factors in addition to parental alienating behaviors may influence Parent-Child relationships. The results underscore the importance of further research to examine the effects of family court decisions and parenting percentages on parent-child relationships.
Keywords: parent-child relationship, temporary and final rulings, final physical parenting time, parent-child-contact-problems, parental alienating behavior
LLU Discipline
Systems, Families, and Couples
Department
Counseling and Family Sciences
School
School of Behavioral Health
First Advisor
Zephon D. Lister
Second Advisor
Brian Cafferky
Third Advisor
Jackie Williams-Reade
Fourth Advisor
Michael Saini
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Degree Level
Ph.D.
Year Degree Awarded
2024
Date (Title Page)
6-2024
Language
English
Type
Doctoral Project
Page Count
xvii, 204 p.
Digital Format
Digital Publisher
Loma Linda University Libraries
Copyright
Author
Usage Rights
This title appears here courtesy of the author, who has granted Loma Linda University a limited, non-exclusive right to make this publication available to the public. The author retains all other copyrights.
Recommended Citation
Nichols, Ruth Ann, "Family Court Rulings Linked to Parent-Child Relationships" (2024). Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects. 2660.
https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/etd/2660
Collection
Loma Linda University Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Collection Website
http://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/etd/
Repository
Loma Linda University. Del E. Webb Memorial Library. University Archives