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Addressing Domestic Violence Across Practice Areas 2020
Chair(s):
Judy Harris Kluger, Charlotte A. Watson
Practice Area:
Domestic violence,
Family law,
Litigation,
Practice skills (Family law),
Pro bono
Published:
Feb 2020
i
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ISBN:
N/A
PLI Item #:
276444
CHB Spine #:
174
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Table of Contents
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Front Matter
Faculty Bios
Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Practice Guide: Evidence Rules and Realities in New York Family Law and Domestic Violence Cases
Chapter 2. Elizabeth Cronin, Prosecuting a Domestic Violence Case: Looking Beyond the Victim’s Testimony, The New York State Judicial Committee on Women in the Courts, Lawyer’s Manual on Domestic Violence, Representing the Victim, Ch. 11, 6th Edition, pp. 115–139 (2015)
Chapter 3. Basic Tips for Direct and Cross of Forensic Evaluator
Chapter 4. Litigating Custody and Visitation in Domestic Violence Cases, The New York State Judicial Committee on Women in the Courts, Lawyer’s Manual on Domestic Violence, Representing the Victim, Ch. 15, 6th Edition, pp. 164–181 (2015)
Chapter 5. Kim Susser, Michael S. Davis, Ph.D., Chris S. O’Sullivan, Ph.D., and Hon. Marjory D. Fields, Custody Evaluations When There Are Allegations of Domestic Violence: Practices, Beliefs, and Recommendations of Professional Evaluators, Final Report Submitted to the National Institute of Justice (2010)
Chapter 6. Jennifer E. Loveland, MA, and Chitra Raghavan, Ph.D., Coercive Control, Physical Violence, and Masculinity, Violence and Gender, Vol. 4, No. 1 (2017)
Chapter 7. Public Interest Pro Bono Association (PIPBA), Working with Survivors of Abuse: A Trauma Informed Approach
Chapter 8. B. J. Cling and Dorchen A. Leidholdt, Interviewing and Assisting Domestic Violence Survivors, The New York State Judicial Committee on Women in the Courts, Lawyer’s Manual on Domestic Violence, Representing the Victim, Ch. 3, 6th Edition, pp. 66–79 (2015)
Chapter 9. Hon. Janice M. Rosa, Assessing Lethality and Risk: What Do We Know, How Can We Help? The New York State Judicial Committee on Women in the Courts, Lawyer’s Manual on Domestic Violence, Representing the Victim, Ch. 4, 6th Edition, pp. 46–51 (2015)
Chapter 10. Jill Laurie Goodman, Updated by Lynn Hecht Schafran and Eliana Theodorou, Intimate Partner Sexual Assault: An Overlooked Reality of Domestic Violence, The New York State Judicial Committee on Women in the Courts, Lawyer’s Manual on Domestic Violence, Representing the Victim, Ch. 7, 6th Edition, pp. 68–76 (2015)
Chapter 11. Hilary Sunghee Seo, Taking Stalking Seriously, The New York State Judicial Committee on Women in the Courts, Lawyer’s Manual on Domestic Violence, Representing the Victim, Ch. 8, 6th Edition, pp. 78–86 (2015)
Chapter 12. Nicole Fidler and Dorchen A. Leidholdt, Litigating Family Offense Proceedings, The New York State Judicial Committee on Women in the Courts, Lawyer’s Manual on Domestic Violence, Representing the Victim, Ch. 9, 6th Edition, pp. 87–114 (2015)
Chapter 13. Jim Hopper, Ph.D., Sexual Assault and the Brain: Key Information for Investigators, Attorneys, Judges, and Others (September 2019)
Chapter 14. Jim Hopper, Ph.D., Sexual Assault and Neuroscience: Alarmist Claims vs. Facts, Psychology Today, January 22, 2018, at https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/sexual-assault-and-the-brain/201801/sexual-assault-and-neuroscience-alarmist-claims-vs-facts
Chapter 15. Jim Hopper, Ph.D., Why Incomplete Sexual Assault Memories Can Be Very Reliable, Psychology Today, September 28, 2018, at https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/sexual-assault-and-the-brain/201809/why-incomplete-sexual-assault-memories-can-be-very-reliable
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