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Journal Article

Citation

Hoekstra KOC. Child. Youth Serv. Rev. 1984; 6(4): 285-298.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1984, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/0190-7409(84)90048-3

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Ecologically defined, the problem of adolescent/family conflict for otherwise "normal" families is a reaction to crisis in the life cycle of the family. A family's success in weathering the crisis is indicated by their successful maturation to the next stage of the cycle; we can assume that in such cases the ratio of stress to coping ability was such that the family could integrate that stress. When conflict escalates to abuse and neglect, however, the indication is that stress has outstripped coping ability, and the implication is for stress-reducing intervention quite unlike the standard existing interventions in either the juvenile justice or child welfare systems, which negatively label family members, make them adversaries, fragment their coping capabilities, and even subject them at times to situations worse than those for which they needed help originally. The interventions called for are those that support beleaguered families; that are based on conceptualizations of people as adaptable and capable of solving their own problems if they are given adequate supports.

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