MEDEIROS, F. F.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/9662771665527153; MEDEIROS, Filipe Fragoso.
Resumen:
This work deals with parental alienation in its normative and doctrinal aspects, as well as the
analysis of the derivative Parental Alienation Syndrome. It develops based on regulatory normative principles, such as the Brazilian Federal Constitution of 1988, civil law provisions,
such as the 2002 Civil Code, and the Child and Adolescent Statute (ECA), guided by a
systematic interpretation and oriented by the principles involved in such provisions, namely,
human dignity and the best interests of the child. It will explain in an accessible manner the
models developed by the fields of law and psychology for identifying behaviors that may fit
into a typified action as parental alienation during the contact between the alienating party and
the individuals susceptible to the action. To consolidate the information presented in the work,
jurisprudential understandings adopted by the major Brazilian courts will be highlighted, along
with the views of influential scholars and jurists active in the relevant field. From another
perspective, the distinction between parental alienation and its subsequent Parental Alienation
Syndrome, as well as their characteristics and essences, will be discussed. The psychological
perspective of the victim will be analyzed to ascertain their behaviors and consequences
resulting from the practice of alienation, as well as the precise determination of the
responsibilities to be attributed to the alienating party, in accordance with the national legal
code. This is accomplished through a methodology involving a literature review, specifically
focused on specialized doctrines, the domestic legal framework, and jurisprudential
interpretations. The work will be structured in a transdisciplinary framework, incorporating
other relevant areas of law to enrich the objective of safeguarding the interests of the victims,
as is common in forensic practice by psychologists, social workers, psychiatrists, and
mediators, all of whom contribute to the process of effectively protecting and promoting self resolution.