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The Argument: Grounding Conflict in Established Science The strongest argument for the attachment-based analysis is that it does not require the creation of a new, debatable diagnosis. Instead, it identifies alienation as a transgenerational transmission of attachment trauma using three well-established pillars of psychology: 1. Attachment Theory (Bowlby & Ainsworth) Attachment is a primary biological drive. A child naturally seeks to love both parents. When a child "rejects" a healthy parent, it is not a "choice"—it is a suppression of the attachment system. This only happens when the child is being pressured by a "pathogenic" parent to choose one side to ensure their own psychological survival within that relationship. 2. Family Systems Theory (Bowen) This perspective views the family as an emotional unit. In alienation cases, a "Cross-Generational Coalition" forms. The alienating parent "triangulates" the child into the adult conflict, using the child as a weapon against the other parent. This violates the necessary boundaries of a healthy family hierarchy. 3. Personality Disorder Dynamics (Splitting) The analysis utilizes the concept of "Splitting" (common in Narcissistic and Borderline personality structures). The child is coached—either overtly or subtly—to view one parent as "all good" and the other as "all evil." This is a sophisticated psychological defense mechanism that the child adopts to appease the personality-disordered parent. The Core Argument: By using an attachment-based model, you move the legal and clinical focus away from "Who is lying?" and toward "What is the child’s psychological state?" It reframes the child's behavior as a symptom of the alienating parent's pathogenic parenting rather than a flaw in the child or the rejected parent.