Eliciting Stance and Mitigating Therapist Authority in Open Dialogue Meetings

Open Dialogue is a collaborative systemic approach to working with families in crisis. A core feature is the creation of dialogue through the elicitation of a multiplicity of voices. Using conversation analysis, we studied 14  hr of Open Dialogue sessions. We found that therapists recurrently produced utterances containing “I’m wondering.” These utterances topicalized particular issues and invited stance positions from other participants while also allowing the therapist to mitigate their deontic authority and pre sent potentially disaligning stances. Therapists thus exercised authority in eliciting stances, but provided recipients with multiple avenues for responding. These findings illustrate that therapist authority is not necessarily antithetical to dialogue and, in well‐crafted forms, may even be neces sary for the creation of polyphony through the elicitation of multiple stances.
Source: Journal of Marital and Family Therapy - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Tags: Original Article Source Type: research