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Journal Article

Citation

Rosen LN, O'Sullivan CS. Violence Against Women 2005; 11(8): 1054-1075.

Affiliation

National Institute of Justice, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1077801205278045

PMID

16043585

Abstract

A random sample of custody and visitation petitions filed in New York City Family Courts in 1995 was used to examine outcomes of mothers' Order of Protection (OP) Petitions in relation to parents' custody and visitation petitions. Fathers restrained by OPs were more likely to secure visitation orders (64%) than not. In contrast, 80.8% of fathers' custody petitions were dismissed when they were restrained by OPs. Fathers' custody petitions were most likely to be ordered when mothers' OP petitions were withdrawn. Mothers were most likely to secure custody when their OP petitions were ordered or withdrawn. Courts rarely denied petitions. Those that did not result in court orders were either withdrawn by the petitioner or dismissed by the court (most likely because of failure of the petitioner to appear in court). This pattern has negative implications for battered women who may be vulnerable to pressure or threats from abusive ex-partners.


Language: en

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