Reflexivity 3. Breaking out the Reflexive Loop to Decolonise Practice

Gail Simon
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Abstract

Reflexivity guides our everyday relational ethics but always takes place within a cultural loop. We find what we recognise. Reflexive practice is a commitment to ethical practice but it isn’t a safety net which stops us from reproducing the same dominant discourses of who or what counts and structures which maintain inequalities. In this paper I explore the question, “How can systemic therapists develop reflexivity in their practice to intentionally change and connect personal struggle with wider systems which reproduce power and inequality?” I describe some differences between what I call Reflexivity 1, Reflexivity 2 and Reflexivity 3 to show the impact of ideology on theory, method and what we (think we) notice and act on. I share some reflexive questions, stories from practice and research and examples of wider systemic activism. These working ideas are a response to concerns that the clinic and the organisations which host them are oppressive, colonial structures which limit the progress members of the public can make within them and restrict opportunities to develop practice-theory which takes into account and challenges social, historic and material inequalites and injustice.
反思 3.打破反思循环,实现实践的非殖民化
反思性指导着我们的日常关系伦理,但总是在文化循环中进行。我们认识到什么,就会发现什么。在本文中,我将探讨这样一个问题:"系统治疗师如何在实践中发展反身性,以有意识地改变个人斗争,并将个人斗争与再现权力和不平等的更广泛系统联系起来?我描述了我所谓的 "反身性 1"、"反身性 2 "和 "反身性 3 "之间的一些差异,以说明意识形态对理论、方法以及我们(认为我们)所注意到和采取的行动的影响。我分享了一些反身性问题、实践和研究中的故事以及更广泛的系统性行动主义的例子。这些工作思路是对以下担忧的回应:诊所及其主办机构是压迫性的殖民结构,限制了公众在其中取得进步,也限制了发展实践理论的机会,而实践理论考虑并挑战了社会、历史和物质上的不平等和不公正。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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