Neelo Aslam’s research while affiliated with Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust and other places

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Publications (1)


The application of a domains-based analysis to family processes: Implications for assessment and therapy
  • Article

February 2014

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649 Reads

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12 Citations

Journal of Family Therapy

Jonathan Hill

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Jane Alderton

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Nichaela Broyden

Social domains are classes of interpersonal processes each with distinct procedural rules underpinning mutual understanding, emotion regulation and action. We describe the features of three domains of family life – safety, attachment and discipline/expectation – and contrast them with exploratory processes in terms of the emotions expressed, the role of certainty versus uncertainty, and the degree of hierarchy in an interaction. We argue that everything that people say and do in family life carries information about the type of interaction they are engaged in – that is, the domain. However, sometimes what they say or how they behave does not make the domain clear, or participants in the social interactions are not in the same domain (there is a domain mismatch). This may result in misunderstandings, irresolvable arguments or distress. We describe how it is possible to identify domains and judge whether they are clear and unclear, and matched and mismatched, in observed family interactions and in accounts of family processes. This then provides a focus for treatment and helps to define criteria for evaluating outcomes.

Citations (1)


... One way to understand those interactions, and listening and action with them, is through the 'Family Domains Framework' (FDF [18,19]), which defines four specific contexts (i.e., domains) of parent-child interactions, demarcated by children's behaviors in the moment, parents' reactions, and the focus and aims of the behaviors of both (See Table 1). Each domain is hypothesized to support a child's development in distinctive ways. ...

Reference:

Balancing Listening and Action is Key to Supportive Parenting
The application of a domains-based analysis to family processes: Implications for assessment and therapy
  • Citing Article
  • February 2014

Journal of Family Therapy