With the economy still on a rocky road to recovery, many couples are choosing less contentious routes to divorce. Collaborative law can be less expensive and a more amicable way to divorce. Especially for the baby boom population that has doubled in divorce rates, collaborative law can be the best way to dissolve a marriage. Baby boomers have kids out of the house and some find that the marriage only lasted because of the kids.<\/p>\n
Dividing the assets becomes a conversation between the couple, and is given the approval with a divorce attorney\u2019s input versus in a courtroom with a judge deciding each individual\u2019s share. \u201cDivorce will always be a tough, emotional journey, but now people are being more practical and pragmatic about how to bring resolution,\u201d said Karen Stewart, a divorce and relationship expert. \u201cBoomers are looking for alternatives to the standard ‘hire two lawyers to fight it out’; people recognize (more…)<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" With the economy still on a rocky road to recovery, many couples are choosing less contentious routes to divorce. Collaborative law can be less expensive and a more amicable way to divorce. Especially for the baby boom population that has…<\/span><\/p>\n