Attachment evidence and expert testimony are reliable and admissible using the DMM and IASA Family Attachment Court Protocol
Attachment experts using reliable methods can offer helpful and relevant information to legal proceedings
Please join ICCI in a discussion about how attachment theory and science can be applied in family law. We would like to hear your thoughts and concerns about the value and limits of attachment, and explore how to use attachment to promote better judicial decision making, improved parenting investigations, and enhanced legal representation, to improve the lives of parents and children.
The Attachment Listening Project (ALP) involves one-on-one interviews and small group sessions. Contact us at Info@ICC.Institute to join the ALP and contribute your thoughts to the discussion.
Attachment experts using reliable methods can offer helpful and relevant information to legal proceedings
© 2018 Mark Baumann, J.D., family law litigator and mediator; Director Integrative Client Counseling Institute; certified Adult Attachment Interview coder […]
When people are exposed to danger, survival-ensuring psychobiological processes take precedence over other brain and body systems. The fight-flight-freeze response […]
January 31, February 1 & 2, 2018 Attachment, Neurodevelopment, & Psychopathology Workshop DMM Attachment training by Dr. Patricia Crittenden Hosted […]
December 9 & 13, 2017: Conflict psychology and attachment This 3-hour workshop is intended for legal, mental health, and parenting […]
SNACCMS: Sports, Nature, Arts, Culture, Clubs, Music, Spirituality These activities, when done with a positive and relational orientation, have all […]
Please join us for the ICCI Attachment Listening Project in the pacific northwest. Sessions are 1 to 1 and from […]
This meta study & responsive comment confirm childhood neglect/abuse impacts brain shape and function, and that attachment is the primary […]
Care includes but is broader than empathy, and is a top 10 element of Integrative Listening. This study identifies a […]
Neural networks in autistic brains are concentrated for short range rather than long range access, as demonstrated by the connectomes […]
© 2015 · Mark K. Baumann