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Introduction

What Is Joint Custody Of A Child

Child Custody Help


Tips & How To

Child Custody Advice For Children

How To File For Custody For A Child

How To Get Full Custody Of A Child

How To Get Joint Custody Of A Child

How To Get Temporary Custody Of A Child

How To Prove Emotional Child Abuse Custody

Top Legal Advice Child Custody


FAQs
Who Gets Custody Of Child In Divorce

Child Custody Mediation

Child Custody Modification

Child Support Fraud

Child Support Help

Winning Child Custody
Winning Child Custody Evaluations

Winning Child Custody


 Top Legal Advice Child Custody

No other situation compares to a child custody war. It takes much choice, deep thought and preparation in strategizing out of a child custody war. Here are five top legal advice in child custody that you could use in every child custody battle.

Step One: It’s No Battle After All: Be Objective and Cooperative.
Now more than ever is the time to be objective and cooperative. It doesn’t mean that the both of you separated and divorced that you both do not have the obligation and responsibility of being a parent. When parents DO fight, nothing is truly resolved. Children would need the additional measures for parents to get together and show them some love and support despite the fact that the parents are separating anyway. Rather than just taking each other and cancelling each other out in the court room, compromise and get into mediation. Child custody is all about your child and his future. Not everything’s an ego trip. Not everything’s about you nor is it about your ex-partner.

Step Two: Consider Your Child’s Best Interests.
In considering legal advice in child custody, remember to work towards the “best interests of the child”. The court, and the parents or guardians must consider the following criteria in no exact ranking or order: (a) preferences of the children and (b) their emotional ties to each parent; (c) lifestyle and social factors of each parent and (d) the ties their children have to the home, school and community; (e) the capability and willingness of each parent to provide for the needs of the child; (f) the family’s history of domestic abuse, child abuse and substance abuse in their many forms; and (g) the continuing special health needs and age of the child. Think about how these factors affect the future life of your children as well as yours.

Step Three: Initial Custody Determination.
If you really think that you could give your child a better future as potentially compared to your ex-partner, you will have to convince the courts that you are the right parent for the job. You have to prove that you have adequate resources, values, abilities and skills enough to raise children on your own. To really get good at this step, you have to think primarily about the child’s best interest.

Step Four: Requesting a Change of Custody.


If you think that winning the custody of your child over your ex-partner would improve the child’s quality of life and condition, you have to have a strong basis on how to prove it. For many reasons, our courts would not want to uproot a child from a familiar environment and you have to work against the court’s natural favor towards letting your child stay with your ex-partner. You have to be flexible in meeting the needs of your child as well as strong in your decision to get your child’s custody from an ex.

Step Five: Win (or Lose) Graciously.
After a decision has been reached, you have to learn how to accept or respect this decision. or Think about it this way. If you have won custody, remember your duties and responsibilities as a parent. If ever you’ve lost, remember that your duties and responsibilities as a parent have not ceased. Come to think about it, no one has really or technically “won” anything.

 

 

Highlights
Child Support With Shared Custody

Commonalities And Child Custody

Examples Of A Child Custody Reference Letter
Fathers Custody Rights

Grandparents Child Custody Rights

Undesignated Residence In Child Custody

Waiting On The Judges

Decision In A Child Custody Case


Child Custody Agreement

Child Custody Arrangements

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