Tag Archive for: Florida Collaborative Divorce

Identity Theft 4 - Family Diplomacy | A Collaborative Law Firm

Florida Divorce: Preventing Identity Theft Through Collaborative Divorce

Florida divorce proceedings can unintentionally expose sensitive financial and personal information to the public, increasing identity theft and privacy risks for professionals, executives, business owners, physicians, lawyers, and other high-net-worth individuals. Collaborative Divorce can help you keep more of your financial and family information private by reducing unnecessary public court filings and avoiding public courtroom litigation whenever possible.

If you are going through divorce in Florida, one of the most important questions you should ask is not just how your divorce will end, but how public the process will become along the way.

Many people are surprised to learn that even amicable divorces resolved through mediation or direct negotiation often still result in sensitive documents being placed in the public court file.

That may include:

  • Financial Affidavits
  • Parenting Plans
  • Marital Settlement Agreements
  • Responses to Requests for Production of Documents

For many families in Tampa Bay and statewide throughout Florida, this level of exposure feels unnecessary and risky.

Quick Answer

Collaborative Divorce can help reduce potential exposure to identity theft and privacy risks by allowing many sensitive financial and parenting documents to remain outside the public court file whenever possible. Unlike traditional divorce litigation and many standard mediated divorces, Collaborative Divorce can be intentionally structured around privacy, discretion, and confidential problem-solving.

Definition: Private Divorce in Florida

A private divorce process in Florida generally refers to resolving divorce issues outside of public courtroom litigation and keeping your private information out of the public court file whenever possible. Collaborative Divorce is the preeminant example because it emphasizes confidential negotiations, private financial disclosure, and reduced public filings.  A judge is still required to grant the divorce and your final judgment of divorce is of public record, but the amount of personal and sensitive information is stripped down to bare bones.

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Cordover Cp Canada Collaborative Divorce Statistics Florida - Family Diplomacy | A Collaborative Law Firm

Cordover Presents to CP Canada on Practical Use of Collaborative Divorce Statistics

On February 5, 2026, Adam B. Cordover presented to CP Canada, Canada’s national Collaborative Practice organization, on the topic “Going Beyond Statistics: What Florida’s Collaborative Practice Survey Outcomes Mean and How to Replicate It.” The presentation was part of a broader conversation about how Collaborative Practice can strengthen its credibility and long-term sustainability through thoughtful use of real-world data.

Cordover co-presented with Dr. Randy Heller of Nova Southeastern University. Together, they co-authored the article “Statistics on Collaborative Divorce in Florida,” published in Volume LV, Issue 1 (2025) of the Florida Bar Family Law Section Commentator Magazine. Their work reflects a decade-long effort conducted by the Florida Academy of Collaborative Professionals to better understand how Collaborative Matters actually resolve in practice.

Why Florida Invested in Long-Term Data Collection

The presentation began by explaining why Florida undertook sustained data collection in the first place. For many years, conversations about Collaborative Practice relied heavily on anecdotes. At the same time, judges often only heard about Collaborative cases when they failed, not when they quietly and discreetly resolved. Florida’s survey was designed to help fill that gap by providing credible information that supports informed decision-making by clients, professionals, and institutions.

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Material Info - Family Diplomacy | A Collaborative Law Firm

Collaborative Divorce: What is “Material Information?”

“Material information” sits at the heart of Collaborative Divorce because the entire process depends on both spouses having the facts they reasonably need to make informed decisions without a judge controlling the outcome. If you value privacy, dignity, and shared control with your spouse of outcome (rather than leaving your life in the hands of a judge), understanding what material information is and why it is important will help you decide whether Collaborative Divorce is right for you.

This issue matters most for professionals, executives, business owners, and others with complex finances or sensitive personal concerns and facing divorce. You want clarity about what must be shared, what can stay private, and how your lawyer protects you while honoring the ethical rules of the Collaborative Process.

Quick Answer: What Is Material Information in Collaborative Divorce?

Material information is information reasonably required for you and your spouse to make informed decisions about resolving your divorce.  In Collaborative Divorce, both spouses commit to sharing that information with each other and the professional team.

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