News Articles - Parental Alienation
Parental Alienation Day, April 25, 2026
By National Day Calendar :…April 25 is Parental Alienation Awareness Day (PAAD), part of a global awareness campaign to raise awareness about parental alienation. The aim of the day is to make the general public, judges, police officers, mental health care workers, child protection agencies, lawyers, as well as friends and family of the targeted
Memorial set up outside court over “needless deaths” linked to “parental alienation”
By The News – Portsmouth, 09/30/2025 “…PAPA founder Simon Cobb, from Portsmouth, spoke to members of the public about the campaign, which has been taking places in towns and cities across the country. He laid a special memorial in Pompey colours for people in this area who have taken their lives as a result of
SubscriberWrites: Parental alienation– A silent mental health crime against children which no one talks about
By Shailesh Saksena, 07/25/2025 “…He defined it as a syndrome where one parent distances the child from the other parent by engaging the child in a series of manipulation techniques to denigrate the other parent, primarily observed in the context of child custody disputes in family courts…” Read the entire article: https://theprint.in/yourturn/subscriberwrites-parental-alienation-a-silent-mental-health-crime-against-children-which-no-one-talks-about/2702057/
Parental Alienation: What Can an Alienated Parent Do?
By Susan Heitler, 06/30/2025 “…When one parent turns his or her children against the other parent via negative innuendos, false accusations, and more, the children (as well as the alienated parent) suffer…:” Read the entire article: https://www.psychologytoday.com/ca/blog/resolution-not-conflict/201802/parental-alienation-what-can-an-alienated-parent-do
Examining the Prevalence and Impact of Parental Alienating Behaviors (PABs) in Separated Parents in the United Kingdom
By Ben Hine et al., 06/09/2025 “…There is limited research on the prevalence of parental alienating behaviors (PABs), with previous studies limited to the United States and Canada. It is critical that such research is conducted in and expanded to various countries and jurisdictions to further support the identification of alienating behaviors as a serious
