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JournalISSN: 0014-7370

Family Process 

Wiley-Blackwell
About: Family Process is an academic journal published by Wiley-Blackwell. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Family therapy & Poison control. It has an ISSN identifier of 0014-7370. Over the lifetime, 2735 publications have been published receiving 104338 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A circumplex model is developed as a tool for clinical diagnosis and for specifying treatment goals with couples and families that proposes that a balanced level of both cohesion and adaptability is the most functional to marital and family development.
Abstract: The conceptual clustering of numerous concepts from family therapy and other social science fields reveals two significant dimensions of family behavior, cohesion and adaptability. These two dimensions are placed into a circumplex model that is used to identify 16 types of marital and family systems. The model proposes that a balanced level of both cohesion and adaptability is the most functional to marital and family development. It postulates the need for a balance on the cohesion dimension between too much closeness (which leads to enmeshed systems) and too little closeness (which leads to disengaged systems). There also needs to be a balance on the adaptability dimension between too much change (which leads to chaotic systems) and too little change (which leads to rigid systems). The model was developed as a tool for clinical diagnosis and for specifying treatment goals with couples and families.

1,349 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The therapy system is called a problem-organizing, problem-dis-solving system distinguished by those who are "in language" about a problem, rather than by arbitrary and predetermined concepts of social organization.
Abstract: From our earliest practice of family therapy at medical schools, private family therapy institutes, and public agencies, our work with difficult populations that do not respond to current treatment technologies has reminded us of the inadequacies of our theoretical descriptions and the limitations of our expertise. This work has influenced our current, evolving clinical theory as we move from thinking of human systems as social systems defined by social organization (role and structure) to thinking of them as distinguished on the basis of linguistic and communicative markers. Hence, for us, the social unit we work with in therapy is a linguistic system distinguished by those who are "in language" about a problem, rather than by arbitrary and predetermined concepts of social organization. We call the therapy system a problem-organizing, problem-dis-solving system.

1,280 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of a family resilience framework developed for clinical practice is presented, and its advantages are described to suggest the broad utility of this conceptual framework for intervention and prevention efforts to strengthen families facing serious life challenges.
Abstract: This article presents an overview of a family resilience framework developed for clinical practice, and describes its advantages. Drawing together findings from studies of individual resilience and research on effective family functioning, key processes in family resilience are outlined in three domains: family belief systems, organizational patterns, and communication/problem-solving. Clinical practice applications are described briefly to suggest the broad utility of this conceptual framework for intervention and prevention efforts to strengthen families facing serious life challenges.

1,124 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper updates the theoretical work on the Circumplex Model and provides revised and new hypotheses, Similarities and contrasts to the Beavers Systems Model are made along with comments regarding Beavers and Voeller's critique.
Abstract: This paper updates the theoretical work on the Circumplex Model and provides revised and new hypotheses. Similarities and contrasts to the Beavers Systems Model are made along with comments regarding Beavers and Voeller's critique. FACES II, a newly revised assessment tool, provides both "perceived" and "ideal" family assessment that is useful empirically and clinically.

818 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper presents the results of the research focused on individuating and elaborating principles and methods that are found highly productive in interviewing the family, under the headings Hypothesizing, Circularity, and Neutrality, to aid the therapist in stimulating the family to produce meaningful information.
Abstract: This paper presents the results of our research focused on individuating and elaborating principles and methods that we have found highly productive in interviewing the family. We have synthesized these principles under the headings Hypothesizing, Circularity, and Neutrality, giving conceptual definitions, descriptions, and practical examples of their application. Our purpose is to aid the therapist in stimulating the family to produce meaningful information, which is indispensable to the therapist in making a therapeutic choice.

817 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202367
2022104
2021156
2020134
201964
201868