Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy
Volume 32, Issue 2, 2011, Pages 129-143

Lost in translation? embracing the challenges of working with families from a refugee background (Article)

Codrington R.* , Iqbal A. , Segal J.
  • a RAPS Adolescent Family Therapy and Mediation Service, Sydney, Australia
  • b RAPS Adolescent Family Therapy and Mediation Service, Sydney, Australia
  • c RAPS Adolescent Family Therapy and Mediation Service, Sydney, Australia

Abstract

This article describes the difficulties a mainstream family therapy service experienced in working with families from a refugee background. The experience of six therapists and five bicultural workers, who are also the referring agents, was captured in focus groups, and the reflections that emerged shaped a four-part approach for working with families from a refugee background. Live consultation, either by the family therapist or bicultural worker, is suggested as a way to marry the expertise of family therapists who are not cultural 'insiders' with the 'lived experience' and cultural expertise of bicultural support workers. The process of reflecting on therapeutic failure resulted in several principles for working therapeutically with families with a history of refugee trauma, unmet resettlement needs and family relationship challenges. These include maintaining a flexible approach to therapy, ascertaining a clear understanding of the referral context, defining an explicit therapeutic contract from the first session, being mindful of the important role that language plays and terminating therapy if it is contra-indicated.

Author Keywords

Refugees Therapeutic failure family therapy trauma

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79959825209&doi=10.1375%2fanft.32.2.129&partnerID=40&md5=d6fab2ba72ffd359c8e6596d117a8253

DOI: 10.1375/anft.32.2.129
ISSN: 0814723X
Cited by: 8
Original Language: English