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Though there is no strict age guideline under Alaska law, children are not generally mature enough to make reasoned decisions about which parent to live with until they are teenagers. Even then, a judge will look at the reason the teenager is expressing a preference for one parent over another.
Under a sole custody arrangement, the custodial parent is vested with decision-making authority for the child, although there is an obligation to provide the access parent with information regarding the health, education and welfare of the child.
Though there is no strict age guideline under Alaska law, children are not generally mature enough to make reasoned decisions about which parent to live with until they are teenagers. Even then, a judge will look at the reason the teenager is expressing a preference for one parent over another.
320 - Custodial interference in the first degree (a) A person commits the crime of custodial interference in the first degree if the person violates AS 11.41. 330(a)(1) and causes the child or incompetent person to be (1) removed from the state; or (2) kept outside the state.
Alaska courts do not give preference to one parent over the other because of their sex. Instead, the judge must consider all of the following factors when determining custody: the child's physical, emotional, mental, religious, and social needs. each parent's ability to meet the child's various needs.
There are two ways a custody order happens: based on both parents' agreement in a settlement; or. the judge's decision.
Abandonment of a child also includes instances when the parent or guardian, without justifiable cause, (1) left the child with another person without provision for the child's support and without meaningful communication with the child for a period of three months; (2) has made only minimal efforts to support and ...
Emergency custody is necessary to protect the child because the child or a sibling or parent of the child is has been mistreated or abused or has been threatened with mistreatment or abuse.