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Mar 20, 2023 · This paper is a distillation of a conversation held with Matteo Selvini, son of Mara Selvini Palazzoli. We discussed the four key influential figures who developed the ‘Milan approach’, Selvini Palazzoli, Boscolo, Cecchin and Prata.
May 1, 1999 · This paper describes the development of this approach and highlights the following topics as central to current thinking: language, power, narrative, family resilience, externalising, focusing on change, and solution focused approaches.
- David Campbell
- 1999
Nov 21, 2020 · The Milan Approach takes a constructivist position and differentiates epistemology from ontology. Nonetheless, it does not disclaim ontology. We could call their constructivism “the art of lenses,” a term widely used by Lynn Hoffman (Hoffman, 2001) and Luigi Boscolo (Boscolo & Bertrando, 1993 ).
- Pietro Barbetta, Umberta Telfener
- 2021
Apr 29, 2013 · The primary aim of the three Milan principles of hypothesising, circularity and neutrality was to proffer an effective methodology for interviewing families, with a secondary aim of casting off the stereotypical personal therapist qualities such as intuition, charisma and concern.
- Judith M. Brown
- 2010
May 1, 1999 · This paper reviews the current position of the Milan Approach in the family therapy field. Over the past 20 years this approach has made a major contribution to the development of family therapy theory and practice in the U.K.
Oct 29, 2018 · In its purest form, a positive connotation is a therapist’s expression of neutrality in regard to the family system and the presenting problem; it is conceived out of a process of hypothesizing; and it is informed by data gathered through circularity of inquiry.
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Oct 10, 2019 · The therapist who founded the Milan Approach developed their practices in Milan, with reference to Gregory Bateson (1904–1980). This break with psychoanalysis and the implementation of family therapy, under the influence of Bateson’s anthropology (Bateson, G., Toward a theory of schizophrenia.