This page will be dedicated to my twins.
This site will address the issues and consequenses involving move-away parents
and the long term effects on the children.
Links:
"Journal of Family Psychology, post-divorce move-aways can be particularly damaging. The study found that among
14 variables related to a young adult's overall well-being, move-away status was correlated to long-term, negative consequences
in 11 of them."
Relocation of children after parents' divorce may lead to long-term problems, study suggests
WASHINGTON -- Children of divorced parents who are separated from one parent due to the
custodial or non-custodial parent moving beyond an hour's drive from the other parent are significantly less well off on many
child mental and physical health measures compared to those children whose parents don't relocate after divorce, according
to new research. The findings, say the study authors, cast doubt on the current legal presumption that a move by a custodial
parent to a destination that the moving parent believes will improve his or her life will also be in the best interest of
the children that moves with them.
The study appears in the June issue of the American Psychological Association's (APA) Journal of Family Psychology,
a special issue on linkages between family psychology and the law, and is the first study to provide direct evidence of the
effect of relocation on children after divorce.
Psychologists Sanford L. Braver, Ph.D., Bill Fabricius, Ph.D., and Law Professor Ira Ellman (the primary drafter
of the American Law Institute's recently released Principles of the Law of Family Dissolution) of Arizona State University
conducted their research by dividing 602 college students into groups on the basis of their divorced parents' move-away status.
One group consisted of those in which neither parent moved more than an hour's drive from the original family home and the
other consisted of students with at least one parent who had moved more than an hour's drive from the original family home.
Both groups were tested on various measures of psychological and emotional adjustment, general life satisfaction, current
health status, their relationship to and among the parents and perceptions about having lived "a hard life." The students
were also assessed on the extent of financial help they were currently receiving from their parents.
Results show significant negative effects associated with the long distance (more than an hour's drive) parental
moves by the mother or father, with or without the child, as compared with divorced families in which neither parent moved
away beyond an hour's drive. "As compared with divorced families in which neither parent moved, students from families in
which one parent moved received less financial support from their parents (even after correcting for differences in the current
financial conditions of the groups), worried more about that support, felt more hostility in their interpersonal relations,
suffered more distress related to their parents' divorce, perceived their parents less favorably as sources of emotional support
and as role models, believed the quality of their parents' relations with each other to be worse, and rated themselves less
favorably on their general physical health, their general life satisfaction, and their personal and emotional adjustment,"
according to the study.

Children of Divorce Have a Right to Grandparents
|