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PSYCHOTHERAPIES IN FORENSIC SETTINGS:Narrative Therapy

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Forensic Psychology (PSY - 513)
VU
Lesson 32
PSYCHOTHERAPIES IN FORENSIC SETTINGS
Objectives
To explore the effective psychotherapies, used frequently in forensic area
To understand the basic assumptions and application of systemic intervention in group
settings
To find out the use and effectiveness of family therapy
To unveil the basic assumptions, and application of Narrative therapy
Systemic Interventions Therapy
SIT considers the importance of system in which an individual is living. No one can live in a vacuum.
Although In Individual Therapy, not minimizing the importance of society but focus is on one
individual. SI occupies the idea that no single being can form the whole system. Man is a part of
society; any offender is not solely responsible for the criminal acts.
SIT is an intensive family- and community-based treatment that addresses the multiple determinants of
serious antisocial behavior. The multisystemic approach views individuals as being nested within a
complex network of interconnected systems that encompass individual, family, and extra familial (peer,
school, neighborhood) factors. Intervention may be necessary in any one or a combination of these
systems.
SIT considers human relationship dynamics to help people change dysfunctional or unhealthy aspects of
human relationship systems. It postulates that if one representative of a human system can recognize and
change dysfunctional patterns, other members of that human system can also change.
For instance a man leaving in indigent condition with wife working as maid for house holds of other
people. Both face the cruel and inhuman behaviours of their employers with insufficient working
conditions (working out side in hot summer), man had a row with co worker and injured him badly.
Many times childhood, past experiences is not that much important in violence than the current system
and conditions. SIT occupies the idea that one individual is not separate from system so, transform the
system for violence and crime reduction.
1. First of all SIT Analyze the system, in which person is living.
2. Working with staff (working conditions, salary, temperature, degree of consistent humiliation
from employer is analyzed) if person is already incarcerated then prison staff can be trained
accordingly. There is a crucial need to transform our jail system, as this place has become den
of crimes. The real aim of jail was to educate the criminals so when they come out of jail would
live with enough skills and earnings. But perversely prisons have become the first places like
where:
Offenders use drugs first time
Homosexuality
People learn to make contacts with other gangs and become serial murderers, terrorist
and so on.
So if we know that a problem exists then why do not try to change prison system? SI approach knows
the reality that the whole jail system would not change over night into university. So SI advocates a
gradual and step by step approach.
To employ SI ideas two things are important:
a. You should belong to that group in some way in which changes are required
b. Spend a lot of time in listening and responding to the problems with consistency.
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Forensic Psychology (PSY - 513)
VU
Training and education at following levels are targeted in Systemic intervention approach
3. Running staff training groups
Trainings to senior officers, decision makers can help in gradual change.
4. Educating managers
5. Workshops for relatives/friends
6. Using groups as pivots
Family Therapy
Another name o f systemic intervention is family therapy and therapist usually meets several members
of the family at the same time. This has the advantage of making differences between the ways family
members perceive mutual relations as well as interaction patterns in the session apparent both for the
therapist and the family. These patterns frequently mirror habitual interaction patterns at home, even
though the therapist is now incorporated into the family system. Therapy interventions usually focus on
relationship patterns rather than on analyzing impulses of the unconscious mind or early childhood
trauma of individuals as a Freudian therapist would do. The transference and counter transference is
meticulously analyzed.
The whole family becomes the client.
Interaction is observed.
Therapy is also provided
Family is asked to maintain a life history book of family, so as a result the whole family
works together and many times solutions become easier because of mutual interaction and
understanding.
Narrative Therapy
NT is developed by Michael White who intensively worked with severe offenders/criminals. Michael
believes that we live in our stories and make small scripts through out the life.
'Narrative therapy is premised on the idea that the lives and the relationships of persons are
shaped by:
The knowledge and stories that communities of persons negotiate and engage in to give
meaning to their experiences
Certain practices of self and of relationship that make up ways of life associated with these
knowledge and stories.
Most criminals have negative stories so living an unlawful, unethical, inhuman life.
A narrative therapy assists persons to resolve problems by:
Encouraging persons to re-author their own lives according to alternative and preferred
stories of identity, and according to preferred ways of life.
Enabling them to separate their lives and relationships from those knowledge and stories
that they judge to be depriving
Assisting them to challenge the ways of life that they find quashing.
How to rewrite the life stories?
Therapists try to re author the client's stories with the help of:
a. Questions
b. Compliments
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Forensic Psychology (PSY - 513)
VU
This is not as easy as it seems, but therapist tries to enhance the positivity of a criminal and every person
experiences create many different stories in their life. These stories may be separate from each other, but
often they occur at the same time or even overlap. It is even possible that the same event creates many
different stories in a person's life. No single story can summarize a person's life, and so many stories
and examination of these stories is required to help understand the person telling them. Narrative
therapy finds ways of developing insight into the stories of the client's life. A therapist using narrative
therapy is interested in the history of their client. They are searching for an in depth account of the
problems that are affecting the client's life. Narrative therapy is sometimes identified as having the
client "re-authoring" or "re-storying" their experiences. These descriptions emphasize that the stories of
people's lives are pivotal to an understanding of the individual.
Phases of narrative therapy
The basic assumption of NT is that people are the experts of their own lives. When they examine
themselves they view their problems as separate from themselves. Within Narrative therapy, people's
beliefs, skills, principles, and knowledge will assist them in reducing the severity of their problems in
their lives.
Therapists can assist their clients in telling their story by acting like an "investigative reporter". The
person who is telling the story is intimately aware of the story they are about to tell to the therapist.
Opening space questions
Asking the client about the time when he/she was happy. Therapist tries to explore the glittering, bright
and shiny period of life. There must be an era, a phase when stars were shining in the lives of those
criminals, now habitual of viewing the world in the darkness of crime. So before problematic area we
can find the opening space for our new positive, non-criminal, healthy story. This approach is contritely
to other approaches as we are all the time focusing on child hood traumas, abuse, and other bad
experiences of criminal's life.
The therapist, as an investigative reporter, has many options for questions in the effort of exposing the
successes the client has accomplished against their problems. These questions can open an examination
of how the problem has influenced the person's life and what aspects of the problem keep the client
from having a productive non-criminal life. The therapist can also examine the characters in the client's
story to determine which are helping the booster, those who are assisting the problem, and what are their
plans in the story. (e.g who were the best friends in childhood and how the offender used to play and
enjoy with them, description of favorite teacher, favorite birthday gift e.t.c)but remember in narrative
therapy focus is on positive events and experiences and negative experiences are deemphasized.
Therapists have many options for questions that are helpful in discovering successes that the client has
achieved. The therapist can help the client identify the aspects of their life that are unaffected by their
current problem and discover why they are safe. The therapist can also look into client's issues and find
what skills and knowledge they currently posses to combat the problem and establish new ways to
strengthen these skills. Identifying the client's desires for a better life can also give insights on successes
that has had over their problem, as well as views on how they would like their story to turn out
Developing stories questions
With all exploratory and investigative questions new stories are developed gradually, you will be
surprised to find so many good things in violent, bad, evil minded offenders, anti social personalities
and murderers. This therapy is no more mechanist rather artistic and humanistic.
Meanings and values questions
New meanings and values and vision of world is created through exploring and stressing on positive
events and rewriting the story.
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Table of Contents:
  1. INTRODUCTION TO FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY:Future of Forensic Psychology
  2. INTRODUCTION TO FORENSIC PSYCHOOGY:Way of police investigation
  3. FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY AND POLICE:Violent Criminals
  4. POLICE PSYCHOLOGY:Use of excessive force, Corruption, Personnel Selection
  5. POLICE PSYCHOLOGY:Fitness-for-Duty Evaluation (FFDE), False Confessions
  6. INVESTIGATIVE PSYCHOLOGY:For instance, Empirical and logical approach
  7. INVESTIGATIVE PSYCHOLOGY:Crime Scene Investigation, Staging
  8. PSYCHOLOGY OF VIOLENCE:Law of Conservation of Energy, Super ego
  9. PSYCHOANALYTIC MODEL AND VIOLENCE:Fixation at Oral Stage
  10. PSYCHOANALYTIC MODEL AND VIOLENCE:Defense Mechanism, Rationalization
  11. JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY AND VIOLENCE:Freudian Methods, JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY
  12. JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY AND VIOLENCE:Religion and mental illnesses
  13. BEHAVIORIST PERSPECTIVE AND VIOLENCE:Shadow’s violence, Child’s violence
  14. BEHAVIORIST PERSPECTIVE AND VIOLENCE:Operant Conditioning
  15. BEHAVIORIST PERSPECTIVE AND VIOLENCE:Schedules of Punishment
  16. SOCIAL LEARNING MODEL AND VIOLENCE:Observational learning, Vicarious punishment
  17. MORAL DEVELOPMENT AND VIOLENCE:Symbolic functioning, Formal operational stage
  18. BIO-PSYCHO-SOCIAL MODEL:Mental hospitals are factories of abuse
  19. ISLAMIC PERSPECTIVE ABOUT VIOLENCE:Morality is essential
  20. ISLAMIC MODEL:Nafs al-Ammara, Nafs al-Lawwama, Nafs ul Naatiqa
  21. TREATMENTS FOR THE SOUL:Tawba, Sabr o Shukr, Niyyat o Ikhlaas, Taffakkur
  22. CRIMINOGENIC PERSONALITY:Personality Disorders, Common Crimes
  23. CRIMINOGENIC PERSONALITY AND VIOLENCE:Mnemonic, Similarities
  24. CRIMINOGENIC PERSONALITY AND VIOLENCE:Terrorism and Psychopaths
  25. LEARNING DISABILITIES/MENTAL RETARDATION AND VIOLENCE
  26. ASSESSMENT OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS:Reasons for referral, Personality Inventories
  27. ASSESSMENT OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS:Different cutoff scores
  28. RISK ASSESSMENT:Violence reduction scale, Stability of Family upbringing
  29. TREATMENT OF VIOLENT BEHAVIOR / PERSONALITY PSYCHODYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPY
  30. JUNGINA THERAPEUTIC MODEL:Limits of re-parenting, Personality Typologies
  31. GROUP THERAPY FOR OFFENDERS:Learning in Groups, Humanistic Groups
  32. PSYCHOTHERAPIES IN FORENSIC SETTINGS:Narrative Therapy
  33. PSYCHOTHERAPIES IN FORENSIC SETTINGS:Solution Focused Therapy
  34. PSYCHOTHERAPIES IN FORENSIC SETTINGS:Avoiding reactance, Externalization
  35. PSYCHOTHERAPY IN FORENSIC SETTINGS AND SPECIAL CHALLENGES
  36. FORENSIC PSYCHOTHERAPY:Exploring therapeutic alliance, Music Therapy
  37. VIOLENCE REDUCTION PROGRAM:Target Population, Lack of motivation
  38. VIOLENCE REDUCTION PROGRAM:Criminal attitude, Interpersonal Aggression
  39. VICTIM SUPPORT:Main features of PTSD, Emotional Support
  40. VICTIM SUPPORT:Debriefing, Desensitization, Eidetic Therapy, Narrative Therapy
  41. SUBSTANCE MISUSE TREATMENT PROGRAM:Marijuana, Unconventional drugs
  42. SUBSTANCE MISUSE TREATMENT PROGRAM:Stages of Change, Homosexuality
  43. EXPERT WITNESS:Insanity Pleas, Sexual Offence Risk, Instructions
  44. COUNTER TERRORISM:Misconceptions, Psychologists & Propaganda war
  45. SUMMING UP FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY:Problems with Risk Assessment, Expert Witness