Relier Pairs Family TherapyVersion en ligne Please complete for mastery... par Sherwood Randolph 1 Double Bind 2 Genogram 3 Covert Power 4 Executive Power 5 Enmeshment 6 Homeostasis 7 Feedback Loops 8 Entropy 9 Family Life Cycle 10 System 11 Subsystems 12 Prescribed Role 13 Paradigm 14 Task-specific power 15 Nuclear Family 16 Enacted Role 17 Developmental Tasks 18 Feminist Family Therapy 19 Gender Sensitive Family Therapy 20 Disengagement 21 Perceived Role 22 Epistemology A set of interacting units or component parts that together make up a whole arrangement or organization A dynamic state of balance or equilibrium in a system or a tendency toward achieving and maintaining such a state in an effort to ensure a stable environment Diffused boundaries Cycles of interactions, that are used to exert influence over families and family members A schematic diagram of a family’s relationship system in the form of a genetic tree and usually including at least three generations Engagement in the behavior relative to a specific status or position The view that an individual who receives important contradictory injunctions at different levels of abstraction- about which he or she is unable to comment or escape- is in a no win, conflict-producing situation Evident when member of the family make decisions about which other members conform or follow The study of the origin, nature, and methods, as well as the limits, of knowledge; thus, a framework for describing and conceptualizing what is being observed and experienced Expectation of self, relative to one’s social position Held by family members who, for example, enter into coalitions to challenge or circumvent executive or task-specific power A family composed of a husband, wife and their offspring, living together as a family unit Inappropriately rigid boundaries Influenced by the expectations that others hold with regard to a social position Problems to be overcome and conflicts to be mastered at various stages of the life cycle, enabling movement to the next developmental stage An organized, coexisting component within an overall system having its own autonomous functions as well as a specified role in the operation of the larger system; within families, a member can belong to a number of such units The concentration of formal decision-making authority into the position of a broadly recognized leader or set of leaders The series of longitudinal stages or events that mark a family’s life, offering an organizing schema for viewing the family as a system proceeding through time A form of collaborative, egalitarian, nonsexist intervention, applicable to both men and women, addressing family gender roles, patriarchal attitudes, and social and economic inequalities in male-female relationships The tendency of a system to go into disorder, and, if unimpeded, to reach a disorganized and undifferentiated state A therapeutic perspective, regardless of theoretical persuasion, that examines the impact of gender socialization on the outlooks, attitudes, behaviors, and interpersonal relationships of men and women A set of assumptions delimiting an area to be investigated scientifically and specifying the methods to be used to collect and interpret the forthcoming data