2012
DOI: 10.1111/famp.12010
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In the Wake of Violence: Enacting and Witnessing Hope Among People

Abstract: In the territory of violence and despair, hope is rare. Recent work on hope has shifted attention from hope as a feeling to hope as a practice that people can do together. This case report of a family exposed to domestic violence highlights the role played by a South African police officer in the mother's actions to separate from the context of violence. As a witness to the violence, the police officer acted from an ethic of justice and an ethic of compassion. Outsider witnessing of a counseling session result… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…A family centered approach would view present difficulties through a lens of understanding how problems and solutions are passed through generations. The use of hope as a practice (Kotze, Hulme, Geldenhuys, & Weingarten, 2013), couples therapy that addresses the reenactment of past traumatic relational problems (Nasim & Nadan, 2013), and collaborative dialogue that involves the use of silencing and disclosure (Song & de Jong, 2014;De Haene, Rober, Adriaenssens, & Verschueren, 2012) could assist the family in healing. Moreover, family grief work that addresses ambiguous loss could focus on finding meaning instead of closure (Boss & Carnes, 2012).…”
Section: / Family Processmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A family centered approach would view present difficulties through a lens of understanding how problems and solutions are passed through generations. The use of hope as a practice (Kotze, Hulme, Geldenhuys, & Weingarten, 2013), couples therapy that addresses the reenactment of past traumatic relational problems (Nasim & Nadan, 2013), and collaborative dialogue that involves the use of silencing and disclosure (Song & de Jong, 2014;De Haene, Rober, Adriaenssens, & Verschueren, 2012) could assist the family in healing. Moreover, family grief work that addresses ambiguous loss could focus on finding meaning instead of closure (Boss & Carnes, 2012).…”
Section: / Family Processmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The uprooted families experience a loss of country, family, and way of life. Indeed, hopelessness along with a sense of isolation are very frequent among uprooted (Kotze, Hulme, Geldenhuys, & Weingarten, ).…”
Section: Socialization and The Image Of The Adaptive Adultmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Madsen offers an extremely helpful exposition of how collaborative helping maps—which collaboratively articulate vision, obstacles, supports, and ultimately a plan—can be enormously useful in this process. Madsen's paper taps into a growing trend of the application and adaptation of systemic concepts and family therapy methods to a wide range of social contexts (Cleek, Wofsy, Boyd‐Franklin, Mundy, & Howell, ; Elizur, ; Kotzé, Hulme, Geldenhuys, & Weingarten, ; Ungar, Liebenberg, Landry, & Ikeda, ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%