Fostered and adopted children can present major challenges resulting from unresolved attachment issues and early traumatic experiences. In this much-needed book, the contributors provide a variety of complementary perspectives on the needs of these children and their families, focusing on ways of integrating attachment theory and developmental psychology into effective practice.
Examining multiple aspects of work with children who are unable to live with their birth families, the book includes contributions on the assessment, preparation and support needs of children and families, attachment and the neurobiological effects of trauma, effective management of contact with birth families and developmental challenges in school settings. The use of creative arts therapies, alongside developmental reparenting strategies as part of a long-term attachment therapy `package’, are explored in some detail.
A fictionalised family, used as a working example throughout Part 2, brings
practical interventions to life: illustrating the Family Futures’ inclusive approach, where adoptive and foster parents become pivotal members of the therapeutic team. In addition, contributions from real-life user families illustrate some of the challenges they face and demonstrate how the developmental attachment-based approach has worked for them.
Bringing together a rich and innovative selection of ideas for adoption and fostering practice across the disciplines, this book will be a valuable resource for all involved in supporting substitute families.
Inhoudsopgave
Foreword. Daniel A. Hughes. Introduction: A Tapestry of Colours. Caroline Archer, Family Futures Consortium, London Part 1. State of Play: Current Theory and Practice. 1. Adoption and Permanence Today: A Discussion. Adrian Briggs, Family Futures Consortium, London. 2. The `Coherent Narrative’: Realism, Resources and Responsibility in Family Permanence. Elsie Price. 3. Setting up the Loom: Attachment Theory Revisited. Alan Burnell, Family Futures Consortium, London with Caroline Archer. 4. Weft and Warp: Developmental Impact of Trauma and Implications for Healing. Caroline Archer. 5. Clinical Concepts and Caregiving Contexts: A Consultant’s Perspective. Jeanne Magagna, Principal Child Psychotherapist, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Sick Children, London. 6. `A Hard Day’s Night’: A Parent’s Perspective. Lucy Greenmile. Part 2: State of the Art: Theory into Practice. Jenny and Marty’s Story Jay Vaughan, Family Futures Consortium, London. 7. Assessment: A Multi-disciplinary Approach. Alan Burnell. 8. Rationale for the Intensive Programme. Jay Vaughan. 9. The Drama of Adoption Jay Vaughan. 10. The Drama Unfolds. Jay Vaughan. 11. Contact as Therapy. Alan Burnell. 12. Holding the Fort. Christine Gordon, Family Futures Consortium, London. 13. Hands on Help. Christine Gordon. 14. Difficulty with Learning or Learning to be Difficult? Griselda Kellie-Smith, Family Futures Consortium, London. Part 3: State, Community and Family: The Future. 15. Weaving Together the Threads: Families with Futures. Caroline Archer. References. Index.
Over de auteur
Caroline Archer is an adoptive parent, an independent consultant in post-adoption support and a therapeutic parent mentor. She is also the bestselling author of Reparenting the Child who Hurts: A Guide to Healing Developmental Trauma and Attachment, First Steps in Parenting a Child who Hurts: Tiddlers and Toddlers 2nd Edition, and Next Steps in Parenting a Child who Hurts: Tykes and Teens (with Christine Gordon).