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Understanding change in a therapeutic community: an action systems approach

Understanding change in a therapeutic community: an action systems approach
Understanding change in a therapeutic community: an action systems approach
This study aims to provide a framework for assessing and modelling behavioural changes in a prison therapeutic community. A behavioural checklist was devised to monitor both positive and negative behaviours throughout the course of therapy, paying particular attention to offence-paralleling behaviours. Content analysis of therapy notes on 68 residents identified 35 variables. The study investigated the hypothesis that it is possible to model behavioural change over the course of therapy using an action systems framework. This framework has been used to classify different forms of anti-social behaviour and pro-social behaviour. The four modes of action system functioning were consistently identified during therapy using smallest space analysis. Paired sample t tests of residents at the beginning and end periods of therapy suggested that residents progress from anti-social to pro-social behaviours from within each mode. Overall, findings support the prison therapeutic community treatment model, and demonstrate the appropriateness of the action systems framework for understanding the nature and function of positive and negative therapeutic behaviours.
1478-9949
181-203
Neville, Lucy
a8e9c5d1-bcd7-4718-bef4-301becabfaab
Miller, Sarah
9512a2a1-9384-4c38-b3df-e2bb9fc3a75a
Fritzon, Katarina
d60d2099-0ddc-4483-aa49-560c5a542f1b
Neville, Lucy
a8e9c5d1-bcd7-4718-bef4-301becabfaab
Miller, Sarah
9512a2a1-9384-4c38-b3df-e2bb9fc3a75a
Fritzon, Katarina
d60d2099-0ddc-4483-aa49-560c5a542f1b

Neville, Lucy, Miller, Sarah and Fritzon, Katarina (2007) Understanding change in a therapeutic community: an action systems approach. Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology, 18 (2), 181-203. (doi:10.1080/14789940601108439).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study aims to provide a framework for assessing and modelling behavioural changes in a prison therapeutic community. A behavioural checklist was devised to monitor both positive and negative behaviours throughout the course of therapy, paying particular attention to offence-paralleling behaviours. Content analysis of therapy notes on 68 residents identified 35 variables. The study investigated the hypothesis that it is possible to model behavioural change over the course of therapy using an action systems framework. This framework has been used to classify different forms of anti-social behaviour and pro-social behaviour. The four modes of action system functioning were consistently identified during therapy using smallest space analysis. Paired sample t tests of residents at the beginning and end periods of therapy suggested that residents progress from anti-social to pro-social behaviours from within each mode. Overall, findings support the prison therapeutic community treatment model, and demonstrate the appropriateness of the action systems framework for understanding the nature and function of positive and negative therapeutic behaviours.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 25 April 2007

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493087
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493087
ISSN: 1478-9949
PURE UUID: 90147ac8-0664-4f7d-b66b-29180e407411
ORCID for Lucy Neville: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5074-5241

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Date deposited: 22 Aug 2024 17:04
Last modified: 23 Aug 2024 02:07

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Contributors

Author: Lucy Neville ORCID iD
Author: Sarah Miller
Author: Katarina Fritzon

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