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FAMILY COURT REFORM IN SIX PENNSYLVANIA COUNTIES
Authors:Jennifer Adams Mastrofski
Affiliation:Jennifer Adams Mastrofski is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies at Pennsylvania State University. Correspondence should be addressed to S-102 South Human Development Building, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802.
Abstract:This article describes judicial behavior in local family court reform movements, vis-à-vis six case studies, as part of a larger study on the implementation of court-connected custody mediation in Pennsylvania. Research findings provide new insight into the initiation of change by judges at the local court level. When motivated to do so, family court judges in Pennsylvania bring about local reform independently and expeditiously. Judges who desire alternative methods to litigation of custody disputes implement court change with few organizational constraints: They decide how and when reform is to be implemented, and they assign nonjudicial professionals to assist in reform implementation. Finally, judges establish their own criteria for assessing the success of change initiated. Throughout reform movements, judges take on a variety of roles in bringing about change—first as reform activists, then as leaders in reform movements, and finally, as advisors in reform implementation. These case studies reveal the diversity in judicial style when court change is implemented; at the same time, similar court goals and objectives are obtained.
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