Forming a Consortium: A Design for Interagency Collaboration in the Delivery of Service Following the Disclosure of Incest
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Family Process
- Vol. 34 (3) , 287-302
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1545-5300.1995.00287.x
Abstract
A central issue in the treatment of intrafamilial sexual abuse is the "secondary trauma" experienced by both the victimized child and her family when the wider system of regulatory and treatment agencies present redundant, incongruent, or conflicting perspectives and demands. This article describes an attempt to effect second-order change through formation of a consortium of regulatory and treatment agencies to develop a consistent and coordinated response to the disclosure of sexual abuse. Feminist, social constructionist, and organizational development ideas are used to develop principles of intersubjectivity, collaboration and a "both-and" stance, which have guided both the clinical and wider systems work.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Treating the Sexually Abused Child: A Recursive, Multimodal ProgramFamily Process, 1994
- Navigating Treatment Impasses at the Disclosure of Incest: Combining Ideas from Feminism and Social ConstructionismFamily Process, 1992
- Love and Violence: Gender Paradoxes in Volatile AttachmentsFamily Process, 1990
- The cybernetics of community responses to incest and child abuse.Family Systems Medicine, 1989
- The Other Side of Dialogue: On Making the Other Strange and the Experience of OthernessAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1988
- Epistemological Confusion in Family Therapy and ResearchFamily Process, 1987
- Feminism and Family TherapyFamily Process, 1985
- Beyond power and control: Toward a "second order" family systems therapy.Family Systems Medicine, 1985
- The Gouverneur Health Services Program: An experiment in ecosystemic community health care delivery.Family Systems Medicine, 1983
- Interdisciplinary versus Ecological ApproachFamily Process, 1968