Children’s participation in family therapy: Towards a dialogical partnership
Julkaistu sarjassa
JYU DissertationsTekijät
Päivämäärä
2021Tekijänoikeudet
© The Author & University of Jyväskylä
Children, or more specifically their symptoms, often bring their families to therapy. Children
can be seen as “doors” through which to enter the family as a multigenerational
and multifaceted chain of relations and its systemic conscious or unconscious core beliefs,
rules and habits. Given that a child’s symptoms reflect some uneasiness in family relations
that might have increased over the years, or even generations, frees the child from
being positioned as the problem or as a scapegoat. Seeing one family member’s symptoms
as an issue or difficulty shared by the whole family enables family therapists to
treat the whole family and view its problems as well as possibilities and resources from
relational perspectives in accordance with systemic principles. Children’s participation
in family therapy has not, however, always been self-evident, despite the original idea
of family. Children’s engagement in a meaningful way in family therapy practice has
commonly been noted as presenting both therapists and families with a challenge. The
number of studies in which the voices of children as family therapy participants are
heard continues to be limited. This doctoral research contributes to filling this gap by
presenting three case studies on children’s perspectives. The first investigated how a
child diagnosed with an oppositional defiant disorder participated in family therapeutic
discussions when the family’s difficulties were discussed. The second studied how sensitive
and multigenerational family secrets were dealt with when children were present.
The third examined how children participated in collaborative post-therapy research interviews
and talked about their perceived difficulties and experiences. The three studies
applied qualitative methods. The research data were drawn from data gathered for a
larger family therapy research project titled “Family-centred Treatment and Systemic
Feedback in the Prevention of the Social Exclusion of Children Diagnosed with Oppositional
Defiant or Conduct Disorder and their Families”. The research project is a collaborative
effort by the University of Jyväskylä, Kuopio University Hospital, and the University
of Eastern Finland. The data consist of video-taped family therapy sessions with
14 families of children aged 6-12. The results presented in this dissertation are primarily
intended for those who are working with families and promoting children’s participation
and agency in family therapy. The most central result of this thesis underlines the
importance of seeing children in family therapy as subjects, i.e., as active and meaningful
dialogical partners whose presence and contributions need to be supported and approached
in a respectful way. The challenging responsibility of the family therapist is to
construct a positive and balanced alliance with each family member. By focusing on a
family’s strengths, family therapy can mobilise the family’s hidden resources and thus
activate an intrinsic healing process within the family.
Keywords: children, family therapy, dialogical approach, qualitative research
...
Julkaisija
Jyväskylän yliopistoISBN
978-951-39-8826-5ISSN Hae Julkaisufoorumista
2489-9003Julkaisuun sisältyy osajulkaisuja
- Artikkeli I: Helimäki, M., Laitila, A., & Kumpulainen, K. (2021). Why Am I the Only One You’re Talking to, Talk to Them, They Haven’t Said a Word? : Pitfalls and Challenges of Having the Child in the Focus of Family Therapy. American Journal of Family Therapy, Early online. DOI: 10.1080/01926187.2020.1870582
- Artikkeli II: Helimäki, M., Laitila, A., & Kumpulainen, K. (2021). ‘Can I tell?’ : Children’s participation and positioning in a secretive atmosphere in family therapy. Journal of Family Therapy, 43(1), 96-123. DOI: 10.1111/1467-6427.12296
- Artikkeli III: Helimäki, M., Laitila, A., & Kumpulainen, K. (2021). “You helped me out of that darkness” : Children as dialogical partners in the collaborative post‐family therapy research interview. Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, Early View. DOI: 10.1111/jmft.12505
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