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		<title>Fort Worth collaborative lawyers redefine divorce</title>
		<link>http://www.unconventionalaction.org/fort-worth-collaborative-lawyers-redefine-divorce</link>
		<comments>http://www.unconventionalaction.org/fort-worth-collaborative-lawyers-redefine-divorce#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Dec 2009 02:18:44 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://unconventionalaction.org/fort-worth-collaborative-lawyers-redefine-divorce</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
 Does every divorce or child custody case have to end in a bitter trial? While in days gone by, Fort Worth Divorce Lawyers devoted the majority of their time to preparing clients for that day of reckoning at the courthouse, times have changed. Although popular media still glorifies the drama of such trials, family [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="margin:0 auto;float:left;padding-right:5px"><img src="http://i.ytimg.com/vi/BE61e7XU8NQ/1.jpg" width="250" height="180" alt="Fort Worth collaborative lawyers redefine divorce"></div>
<p> Does every divorce or child custody case have to end in a bitter trial? While in days gone by, Fort Worth Divorce Lawyers devoted the majority of their time to preparing clients for that day of reckoning at the courthouse, times have changed. Although popular media still glorifies the drama of such trials, family law lawyers in Dallas and Fort Worth have embraced collaborative law as a smart alternative to trial.</p>
<p>Divorce trials p<span id="more-10"></span>ut people in an adversarial framework where the only means of achieving success is at the expense of their spouse. Unfortunately, Attorneys learned that such &#8220;winner take all&#8221; conflicts at the courthouse did not lay the foundation for effective co-parenting post-divorce. Ultimately, it is the children of these divorces who pay the ultimate price when they are caught in the middle of parental conflict and bitterness caused by a bitter divorce.</p>
<p>What makes the collaborative divorce different? In a collaborative divorce, divorcing couples sign a Collaborative Law participation agreement that requires they do not seek any relief from a court while participating in the process. How do things get resolved without family court and a Judge? Issues are resolved through a series of four-way meetings, face to face, between the spouses and their collaborative attorneys.</p>
<p>Collaborative divorce requires a full and complete disclosure of marital property and debts and a meaningful exchange of ideas between the parties focus on their needs rather than seeking an advantage over the other spouse. While divorcing couples still have conflict and disagreements in collaborative divorce, the process gives them a &#8220;safe&#8221; way to systematically work on the issues without resort to personal attacks on the other spouse.</p>
<p>Collaborative law attorneys in Fort Worth and in Dallas are experiencing rapid growth in their practices as divorcing couples learn about the advantages of the collaborative process. Finally, divorce lawyers have found a way to be a part of the solution rather than a part of the problem.</p>
<p>&lt;strong&gt;But how do you get started with a collaborative divorce?&lt;/strong&gt; First, you need to find a family attorney who is trained in the collaborative law process. </p>
<p>Next, you need to educate your spouse about the collaborative law process and it&#8217;s benefits for divorcing couples. At <a rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.lawtolife.com">Schreier &amp; Housewirth</a> family law, we have helpful written materials you can give to your spouse that will clearly explain the process. Remember, both you and your spouse have to agree to use the collaborative divorce process rather than divorce by trial. Finally, your spouse will need to locate a lawyer. As members of the Collaborative Law Institute of Texas and the Tarrant County Collaborative Professionals, we can help your husband access our collaborative professionals network in the Dallas and Fort Worth area.</p>
<p> <!--more--> <H3>Watch the video related to collaborative law</H3>
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<p>There are many ways through which a family law matter may be resolved. In addition to other manners of alternative dispute resolution (ADR), such as mediation or arbitration, there is the traditional litigation way in which cases are taken to court. However, many families have discovered that leaving the decisions up to the judge is not in their best interests. An up-and-coming avenue for resolving a divorce and other family law issues, collaborative law is a process through which the &#8230;  <H3>Help answer the question about collaborative law</H3>Summarize evaluation reports of a community-oriented policing program or effort.?<br />Working with the assumption that you have been hired as consultants to implement and evaluate a community policing effort for a fictitious mid-sized municipal police agency.  Here is the article:  6 Bringing Victims into Community Policing </p>
<p>prevention&quot; is something that police organizations tend to<br />
do at a community or group level. Victim service<br />
organizations are often hesitant to focus on crime<br />
prevention because they are usually focused exclusively on<br />
the aftermath of crime. However, victim service<br />
organizations, especially those working on domestic<br />
violence and stalking, often assist individual victims with<br />
&quot;safety planning&quot; to develop strategies to maximize the<br />
victim&#039;s safety. Collaborative efforts using both these<br />
approaches could prove to be very effective. </p>
<p>In summary, our overall project has reinforced for us the<br />
importance of closer collaboration between crime victims,<br />
crime victim organizations, and the police. It is time to bring<br />
the victim into community policing. </p>
<p>Our work shows that community policing can be greatly<br />
enhanced by working to prevent repeat victimization and<br />
building collaborative problem solving relationships with<br />
victims and victim organizations. The information and tools<br />
included in this package are a distillation of all that we have<br />
learned over the last 18 months about the relationship<br />
between police and crime victims. We hope that these<br />
materials will help police organizations enhance the practice<br />
of community policing by building stronger problem solving<br />
relationships with crime victims and the organizations that<br />
serve them.The Promise of Preventing Repeat Victimization </p>
<p>A fundamental tenet of community policing holds that police<br />
should work with community-based partners to solve<br />
problems. The most difficult aspect of problem solving is the<br />
identification and effective analysis of problems. Police<br />
organizations use an array of macro-level tactics to identify<br />
and analyze crime problems. Data are collected, crime maps<br />
are analyzed, patrol officers are surveyed, and community<br />
organizations are consulted. This approach depends on a high<br />
level of resources and tends to only identify problems once<br />
they have become big enough to draw police attention. </p>
<p>In contrast, identifying and preventing repeat victimization is<br />
problem solving that starts at the micro level. Because repeat<br />
victimization affects individual people and targets, effective<br />
problem solving begins at an individual level and moves to<br />
larger groups when appropriate. </p>
<p>To fully understand the nature of repeat victimization and<br />
develop effective responses, law enforcement agencies must </p>
<p>capitalize on non-traditional as well as traditional sources of<br />
information. It&#039;s essential, for example, to look beyond arrest<br />
data and calls for service and consider residential, business<br />
and environmental surveys, victim and offender interviews,<br />
mapping/GIS data, and social services data. The next task is<br />
to analyze this data. </p>
<p>Thorough data analysis can yield surprising information about<br />
underlying causes, illuminating problems and pointing the way<br />
to solutions. Only through sound analysis can the detailed<br />
picture needed to fashion effective responses emerge. Without<br />
it, opportunities to develop alternative, non-traditional<br />
responses are likely to be missed and strategies to prevent<br />
repeat victimization are likely to fail. </p>
<p>One final point. Effective first response is vital to address the<br />
problem of repeat victimization. But, it can also reduce<br />
reliance on resource-intensive problem identification methods,<br />
enabling the early resolution of crime problems. </p>
<p>Implications of a Policy to Prevent Repeat<br />
Victimization </p>
<p>This policy creates an approach to preventing repeat<br />
victimization that focuses on victim safety and strengthens the<br />
foundation of community policing: partnering and problem<br />
solving. Creating an organizational focus on preventing repeat<br />
victimization of individuals will affect many principles<br />
governing police operations.<br />
 <H3>About Author</H3>
<p></strong></p>
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		<title>Vallejo Family Law Firms &#8212; Making Divorce Cost Effective</title>
		<link>http://www.unconventionalaction.org/vallejo-family-law-firms-making-divorce-cost-effective</link>
		<comments>http://www.unconventionalaction.org/vallejo-family-law-firms-making-divorce-cost-effective#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Oct 2009 02:18:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://unconventionalaction.org/vallejo-family-law-firms-making-divorce-cost-effective</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
 Everyone has horror stories about the Vallejo divorce process. People say that it takes years. People talk about spending huge and unexpected amounts of money on Vallejo	family law firms. You hear about many instances where the divorce has harmed relationships with children, family, and friends. Many find that child support payments cause them to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="margin:0 auto;float:left;padding-right:5px"><img src="http://i.ytimg.com/vi/n_JLu0e4xxA/3.jpg" width="250" height="180" alt="Vallejo Family Law Firms -- Making Divorce Cost Effective"></div>
<p> Everyone has horror stories about the Vallejo divorce process. People say that it takes years. People talk about spending huge and unexpected amounts of money on Vallejo	family law firms. You hear about many instances where the divorce has harmed relationships with children, family, and friends. Many find that child support payments cause them to live as frugally as students until their children’s emancipation. Post-divorce problems can linger <span id="more-11"></span>for years, even for a lifetime.</p>
<p>In a mediated divorce, the two divorcing parties meet with one mediator (usually, but not necessarily a service offered by Vallejo	family law firms). You meet with a Vallejo family law firm a number of times. The Vallejo family law firm will to address and try to resolve the issues in your divorce. <a rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.bay-area-family-law.com/Vallejo-Family-Law/2007/06/vallejo-family-law-firms-making-divorce.html" target="_blank">Vallejo family law firms</a> hired in this capacity do not represent either of the parties. The Vallejo	family law firms must be (and must be viewed by the parties as) an impartial, objective, fair third-party.</p>
<p>A mediated divorce (using advocate lawyers at relevant points) is the Camry of divorces. It’s solid, safe for the most part, and it can do almost everything you want. But the collaborative divorce is like a Prius. It has the most advanced resources at its disposal. It’s groundbreaking, and it can turn a sometimes dirty process into something that is a lot better for the environment.</p>
<p>The premise of collaborative divorce is to resolve the divorce though a series of meetings between the clients and their respective Vallejo family law firms. These four-way meetings, are actually what the courts require litigants to do prior to the trial in a litigated divorce. </p>
<p>So.., the main difference is that instead of you, your spouse and a Vallejo family law firm, you have you, your spouse and two <a rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.bay-area-family-law.com" target="_blank">Vallejo family law firms</a> &#8211; one for each of you. The benefits of collaborative law are great. Better, more workable, and longer-lasting solutions are generated. Relationships with family are preserved. It is generally not more expensive than mediated divorces (with the advocate attorneys’ critical involvement.) It is generally much less expensive than litigated divorces. </p>
<p>I hope your brain isn&#8217;t spinning too much at this point. But here&#8217;s it in a nutshell, you can</p>
<p> &#8211; mediate</p>
<p> &#8211; have a collaborative divorce </p>
<p> &#8211; create a separation agreement.</p>
<p> &#8211; duke it our in court.</p>
<p>The first three are usually the best. </p>
<p>Before filing your dissolution, contact multiple <a rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.bay-area-family-law.com/Vallejo-Family-Law/2007/06/vallejo-family-law-firms-making-divorce.html" target="_blank">Vallejo family law firms</a>  &#8211; or better yet, fill in our contact form and let us give you a list of the best Vallejo family law firms for your particular case. Divorce is quite emotional but, the court sees it strictly as a legal matter. The law is designed to be fair, and that&#8217;s all Vallejo family law firms are trying to do. Help you create a fair settlement. </p>
<p>It might be worthwhile to consult with our Vallejo family law firms. Fill out our contact form and let us help you. </p>
<p> <!--more--> <H3>Watch the video related to collaborative law</H3>
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</p></div>
<p>Collaborative law and Mediation offer people going through divorce a forum to work out, rather than litigate, child custody, parenting time, and property division issues. At the law firm of Sullivan Taylor &amp; Gumina, in Wheaton, Illinois, we have extensive experience helping people in DuPage, Kane, and Will County resolve divorce disputes through Collaborative law and Mediation. Contact us today regarding your mediation and collaborative law matters. Contact the DuPage County Mediation and &#8230;  <H3>Help answer the question about collaborative law</H3>Why did they impeach Clinton for his lies, but not Bush?<br />By lying to Congress, Bush violated US Laws related to fraud and false Statements, Title 18, Chapter 47, Section 1001 and Conspiracy to Defraud the United States, Title 18, Chapter 19, Section 371.</p>
<p>Lie #1 &#8211; Uranium from Niger &#8211; Bush said &quot;The British Government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.&quot; in his State of the Union Address.</p>
<p>Lie #2 &#8211; Iraq and 9/11 &#8211; Bush led people to believe that Iraq was involved with 9/11 by repeatedly linking them in his speeches. This was so effective that at one point 70% of Americans actually believed Saddam was behind 9/11. Bush has since admitted that this was not true.</p>
<p>Lie #3 &#8211; Congress Knew &#8211; Bush has stated that Congress had access to all the same information that the White House had. Thus he should not be blamed for making the mistake of going to war. But Bush was briefed many times about the falsehood of various stories and this information never reached Congress.</p>
<p>Lie #4 &#8211; Aluminum Tubes &#8211; Bush, Cheney, Rice and Powell said that aluminum tubes Iraq attempted to buy were intended for use in a uranium centrifuge to create nuclear weapons. These were the only physical evidence he had against Iraq. But it turns out this evidence had been rejected by the Department of Energy and other intelligence agencies long before Bush used them in his speeches.</p>
<p>Lie #5 &#8211; Iraq and Al Qaeda &#8211; Bush still insists that there was a &quot;relationship&quot; between Iraq and Al Qaeda. But the 9/11 Commission released a report saying, among other things, that there was no &quot;collaborative relationship&quot; between Al Qaeda and Iraq. The nature of the relationship seems to be that Al Qaeda asked for help and Iraq refused. Al Qaeda was opposed to Saddam Hussein because Saddam led a secular government instead of an Islamic government.</p>
<p>Lie #6 &#8211; Weapons of Mass Destruction &#8211; Bush insisted that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction but his &quot;evidence&quot; consisted mostly of forged documents, plagiarized student papers, and vague satellite photos. The United Nations was on the ground in Iraq and could find nothing. After extensive searches Bush was finally forced to admit that Iraq did not have weapons of mass destruction.</p>
<p>Lie #7 &#8211; Mobile Weapons Labs &#8211; Bush and his team repeatedly claimed that Iraq possessed mobile weapons labs capable of producing anthrax. Colin Powell showed diagrams of them at his speech before the UN to justify invading Iraq. These claims originated from Curveball, a discredited Iraqi informer who fed Bush many of the stories related to WMD. On May 29, 2003, two small trailers matching the description were found in Iraq. A team of bio-weapons experts examined the trailers and concluded they were simply designed to produce hydrogen for weather balloons. But, for over a year, Bush claimed these were part of Iraq&#039;s bio-weapons program. The expert&#039;s report was suppressed and only recently made public. Read the Iraq survey report.</p>
<p>Lie #8 -The Bush wiretaps violated US law because he was required to get approval from FISA. He can start a wiretap of a suspected terrorist at any time but must then seek approval to continue within 72 hours.</p>
<p>Lie #9- Attorney General Gonzales claims HJR114 gave Bush authority to conduct the wiretaps. But HJR114 only grants use of the &quot;Armed Forces&quot;. HJR114 does not explicitly suspend the Constitution. Also HJR114 requires &quot;The President shall, at least once every 60 days, submit to the Congress a report on matters relevant to this joint resolution, including actions taken pursuant to the exercise of authority granted in section 3&quot;. Congress was not notified of these wiretaps.</p>
<p>Whose lies do you think were worse?<br />
 <H3>About Author</H3>
<p></strong>
<p>please visit  <a rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://bay-area-family-law.com/" target="_blank">Bay Area Family Law</a>  for more information.</p></p>
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