PSYCHOLOGY OF CONFLICT AND FAMILY VIOLENCE
cod. 1006636

Academic year 2023/24
2° year of course - First semester
Professor
- Daniela FERRARI
Academic discipline
Psicologia sociale (M-PSI/05)
Field
Psicologia sociale e del lavoro
Type of training activity
Characterising
42 hours
of face-to-face activities
6 credits
hub: PARMA
course unit
in ITALIAN

Learning objectives


The course aims to favour:
• The acquisition of the ability to read the conflict dynamics and to define possible intervention strategies.
• The acquisition of knowledge and understanding related to the psychological components that derive from gender disparity.
• The acquisition of knowledge and understanding related to the psychological consequences of repeated abuse (traumatic links)
• Acquisition of the ability to recognize domestic violence, to welcome and support victims and to plan effective interventions aimed at their protection and the re-establishment of an autonomous and dignified existential condition.
• The ability to define a management project taking into account the needs and rights of the recipients and the resources available both "in" people and in the context.
• The acquisition of the ability to apply knowledge, understanding and ability to tackle problems to new or unfamiliar issues, considering diversified intervention contexts (public / private / associations, school / health services, etc.).
• The acquisition of the ability to reflect on social and ethical responsibilities related to the application of knowledge and judgments;
• The acquisition of the ability to recognize and manage complexity knowing how to complete limited or incomplete information starting from the resources offered by the context and the interlocutors present.
• The acquisition of the ability to communicate the conclusions, as well as the knowledge and rationale underlying them to specialist and non-specialist interlocutors, in a clear and unambiguous manner

Prerequisites


Knowledge of social psychology, psychology of family dynamics and child protection

Course unit content


- The first part of the course addresses the issue of conflict within the family by focusing on conflict in the couple.
The couple is therefore the relational context from which the analysis of conflict dynamics and possible conflict management methodologies is developed.
- The second part of the course deals with the theme of violence as an extreme form of expression of conflict and oppression. Violence will be considered here as gender-based violence and will therefore lead us to limit cases to heterosexual couples.
Representing a paradigmatic example of the hierarchical relationship between social groups, gender difference will be studied as an expression of value structures, systems of meanings, economic and power relations.
The role and skills that the professional figure of the psychologist can assume in welcoming and accompanying women who are victims of domestic violence or who suffer from serious family problems will be outlined and discussed. The intervention strategies will concern both direct support to the victim and relations with the various institutional interlocutors who necessarily intervene in the protection process.

Full programme

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Bibliography

1) Mazzei D., Neri V. (2017). La mediazione familiare. Il modello simbolico trigenerazionale. Milano: Raffaello Cortina Editore


2) Monacelli N. (2023). Donne e madri vittime di violenza. Dalla retorica dell’aiuto alla responsabilità dell'intervento Edizioni Junior

3) Malaguti E. (2005). Educarsi alla resilienza. Trento: Erickson

4) Fleckinger A (2020). The Dynamics of Secondary Victimization: When Social Workers Blame Mothers. Research on Social Work Practice, XX(X),1-9

5) Lapierre S. (2010).Striving to be ‘Good’ Mothers: Abused Women’s Experiences of Mothering. Child Abuse Review Vol. 19: 342–357

6) Romero M. A Comparison Between Strategies Used on Prisoners of War and Battered Wives ^Sex Roles, Vol. 13, Nos. 9/10, 1985

7) Dutton D Traumatic bonding: The development of emotional attachments in battered women and other relationships of intermittent abuse; Victimology · January 1981

Teaching methods


The course includes (when in presidential mode) lectures, group work, video and simulated analysis

Assessment methods and criteria


The student can choose between two exam methods:
1) an oral interview that concerns the compulsory bibliography and the contents of the lessons. The oral exam is aimed at assessing the autonomy of judgement, the critical sense and the ability to address the issues faced during the course.


The final grade of the exam is given by the sum of three partial votes.

1) theoretical knowledge (10/10)
2) methodological skills in defining the needs and hypotheses of intervention (10/10)
3) ability to evaluate one's role and its impact in the intervention process. (10/10)

Other information

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