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General Family Systems 
Theory & Structural 
Family Therapy 
Jane F. Gilgun, PhD, LICSW 
Professor, School of Social Work 
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities USA
Topics 
• General Family Systems Theory 
• Circular causality 
• Ecosystems & Culture 
• Structural Family Therapy
Family Systems Theory 
• Definition of system: units that interact and 
mutually influence each other 
• Families: “unity of interacting personalities” 
• Families are persons who interact with each 
other and mutually influence each other; 
• Definition of family: persons related by 
blood, legal ties such as adoption or 
marriage or mutual agreement 
• Enduring relationships; commitment
Family Systems Theory 
• We live our lives in interactional contexts 
(Hardy) 
• Re-orients how we think about the world 
• Interactional terms 
• A affects B and B affects A 
• Bidirectionality 
• Mutual influence 
• Reciprocity 
• Circular causality 
• Non-productive & frustrating interactions are family 
systems issues
Family Systems Theory 
• Family therapy works with systems of interactions 
• Example: When parents are not family leaders, this 
results in children not following rules and violating 
boundaries that in turn affects parents’ leadership 
and so on 
• Events in one person’s life affects another 
• Effects of incest—inside family 
• Father loses job—outside event affects family 
• Older child bullies younger child
Patterns of Interactions 
• Who is in charge? 
• Where is the power in families & groups? 
• Who is left out? 
• Who is allied with whom? 
• What are the rules of interaction? 
• What types of interactions? 
• Chaotic? 
• Enmeshed? 
• Disengaged? 
• Balanced?
Family Systems/ 
Circular Causality 
• She is depressed because her partner shows no 
interest; her partner shows no interest because she 
is depressed—becomes self-perpetuating. 
• Metaphor is a “hamster wheel” 
• “family dance” is the family’s patterns of circular 
interactions/causality 
• Definition & Demonstration of Circular Causality: 
Jacob Spillman video at 1.52: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=2z3EhBqvrPI
Ecosystems & Culture 
• Circular influences between culture & 
individuals 
• How individuals enact culture is particular & 
yet contains cultural themes 
• People born in other counties 
• Traditional gender roles may be up-ended 
• Often have experienced complex trauma 
• Family ties may have changed 
• Send money home 
• Typically work longer hours than others 
• Typically have lower salaries
Macrosystems Issues in 
Families of Color in US 
• Poverty common 
• Unemployment 
• Some seek other sources of income 
• Health & Mental Health Issues 
• Historical trauma 
• Gender issues 
• Some males adopt “cool pose” 
• Some women adopt their own version of cool pose 
• Language issues 
• Words activate images, have meaning and impact
People of Color in US 
• Sources of support & identity & sense of 
belonging 
• Everyone wants to experience possibilities to 
achieve personal goals 
• Dignity & worth foundational 
• Family & extended family 
• Community efforts: building communities
People of Color in US 
• Organizations that support child and family 
development: Northside Achievement Zone 
• Sports—schools and community 
• Churches 
• Gangs especially for young people who are fearful and 
discouraged 
• Lack of opportunity can have serious consequences 
• Young Somali men who become freedom fighters/terrorists
Structural Family Therapy 
• Parents are in charge/Family hierarchy 
• Key Ideas 
• Family rules: ex: older children can interrupt & ignore 
younger children 
• Patterns of Interactions 
• Non-productive & frustrating interactions are 
family systems issues 
• General Goal: Effective Family Organization 
& Processes 
• Therapists’ Role: Active
Structural Family Therapy 
• Grounded in family systems theory 
• Developed by Minuchin and colleagues for 
• poor families of color with 
• organizational difficulties 
• Seeks to help families reorganize so that 
• Parents are in charge 
• Boundaries are clear & flexible 
• Healthy patterns of interaction are the goals 
• Video 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shbX4ww 
zA_s
Components of Family 
Organization 
• Family Hierarchy 
• Parents have more power than children; develop 
“rules” & reward following of “rules” 
• Boundaries 
• Balanced 
• Diffuse 
• Rigid 
• Alignment 
• Power
Principles from Minuchin 
Center on Family Therapy 
• strength-based, outcome oriented treatment 
modality based on ecosystemic principles: 
• Context organizes us. Our behaviors are a function of 
our relations with others. The structural therapist 
focuses on what is taking place among people, rather 
than on individual psyches. 
• The family is the primary context, the “matrix of 
identity” where we develop our selves as we interact 
with spouses, parents, children, and other family 
members. The family is in constant transformation, 
adapting to an ever changing social environment.
Principles from Minuchin 
Center on Family Therapy 
• Family's structure 
• recurrent patterns of interaction that its members develop 
over time, as they accommodate to each other 
• A well functioning family 
• Defined not by the absence of stress or conflict, 
• but by how effectively members handle them 
• Therapist helps family 
• To identify and mobilize underutilized strengths to 
• actualize of its own resources
Foundation of 
• Brief strategic family therapy 
• Multisystems family therapy 
• & probably most of the others
Basic Ideas 
• Brief treatment 
• Behavior problems experienced by one 
member of the family system are understood 
as stemming from the family’s patterns of 
transactions 
• Example: A parent who allows an older child to 
be overbearing & hurtful to younger children 
• The younger child or children may be the focus 
of parental concern
Basic Ideas 2 
• Three subsystems 
• parental 
• parent-child 
• sibling 
• Seek to help families to develop clear roles and 
boundaries in family subsystems
Basic Ideas 3 
• Boundaries—are they flexible? 
• Balanced—turn taking, respect personal space 
• Rigid—keep others out: isolated & disengaged 
• Diffuse—not clearly defined to family enmeshment 
& high reactivity and even chaos 
• Example of diffuse: waking in on others in 
bathroom; rummaging through personal effects of 
others; not listening, interrupting, yelling, name-calling; 
• Rigid: not sharing person things; silent treatments; 
not knowing much about others in family
Procedures 
• Joining 
• a process by which the therapist creates a 
new subsystem within the family group 
• Enactments 
• Interact in session what happens at home 
• Service provider sees and experiences the patterns 
of interaction in the sessions
Joining 
• Goal: establish trust 
• Notice family “style” 
• How they interact 
• Words they use 
• Family affect—low key, loud, mixed 
• Allow yourself to be part of the family system but 
also the person charged with facilitating change: 
keep your analytic stance 
• Do not ally with any family member 
• Technical term: Mimesis
Joining 2 
• Explain how the therapy works 
• I will ask you to try to new things with me present 
• I will ask you to try new things at home and then 
when we are together again we’ll do a check-in 
about them 
• How I do things, no one is blamed 
• I want to help you work together as a family 
• Ask them if this is okay with them 
• Ask them to try it and see how it works for them
Enactments 
• Have families talk to each other about an issue that they 
had been describing 
• Can then suggest another way of interacting 
• Example 
• In the enactment, family members interrupt each 
other
Enactments 2 
• You see that frustrates the person being interrupted 
and the interrupter may feel superior but also 
frustrated 
• How about a no-interrupt rule? 
• Have them practice 
• Homework 
• Have them note whether interruptions occur at home 
and how persons respond to the interruptions
Enactments 3 
• The interruptions stop but no one responds to what the 
person said but instead brings up another topic 
• Ask if they’d like to feel as if someone heard what they say 
• Explain one part of active listening 
• Have them practice in session 
• Homework 
• Have them note whether anyone appears to hear them at home 
• In Session 
• Help them to interact in these new ways
Reframing 
• A different way of looking at/understanding something 
such as a persons’ behavior or how someone labels a 
behavior 
• Involves seeing something from another point of view, 
usually more favorable and focused on strengths 
• Might help family members get unstuck from rigid 
patterns of thinking 
• The reframe must fit with families’ worldviews 
• Example 
• “Mary is too sensitive” 
• “Do you mean she responds well to praise?”
Example of Reframing 
• Example: helping family members not 
scapegoat but to see behaviors of an 
individual as part of a system 
• Family member: “Robbie is angry all the 
time” 
• Therapist: “I wonder if this happens 
when he feels stuck by something that is 
happening inside the family”
Illustrations of SFT 
from Research 
• Reciprocity/circularity 
• Between 40 and 70% of children whose mothers 
experience mental health problems meet criteria for a 
psychiatric disorder 
• This is more evidence for Importance of family work 
• Parents often see linear causality 
• Don’t see connections between their issues & their 
children’s 
• Think if children’s behaviors improve, they will feel & 
function better
Findings from a Research 
Project 
• Mothers depression symptomology 
improved 
• No improvement for children 
• Problem 
• Where were therapists’ reports on 
changes in family interactions that they 
witnessed in sessions?
Number of Sessions Important 
• Present study: average of 5.6 family 
sessions. 
• Every 3-4 weeks (weak dosage) 
• Clinicians had caseloads of 80-90!!! 
• Higher than 4.3 in routine treatment settings 
• 13-17 sessions are typically required in 
efficacy trials (Hansen et al., 2002).
Summary: Seeing SFT 
• Principles 
• Family diagrams 
• Enactments 
• Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPW0UZd9gQ4
General Family Systems Theory & Structural Family Therapy

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General Family Systems Theory & Structural Family Therapy

  • 1. General Family Systems Theory & Structural Family Therapy Jane F. Gilgun, PhD, LICSW Professor, School of Social Work University of Minnesota, Twin Cities USA
  • 2. Topics • General Family Systems Theory • Circular causality • Ecosystems & Culture • Structural Family Therapy
  • 3. Family Systems Theory • Definition of system: units that interact and mutually influence each other • Families: “unity of interacting personalities” • Families are persons who interact with each other and mutually influence each other; • Definition of family: persons related by blood, legal ties such as adoption or marriage or mutual agreement • Enduring relationships; commitment
  • 4. Family Systems Theory • We live our lives in interactional contexts (Hardy) • Re-orients how we think about the world • Interactional terms • A affects B and B affects A • Bidirectionality • Mutual influence • Reciprocity • Circular causality • Non-productive & frustrating interactions are family systems issues
  • 5. Family Systems Theory • Family therapy works with systems of interactions • Example: When parents are not family leaders, this results in children not following rules and violating boundaries that in turn affects parents’ leadership and so on • Events in one person’s life affects another • Effects of incest—inside family • Father loses job—outside event affects family • Older child bullies younger child
  • 6. Patterns of Interactions • Who is in charge? • Where is the power in families & groups? • Who is left out? • Who is allied with whom? • What are the rules of interaction? • What types of interactions? • Chaotic? • Enmeshed? • Disengaged? • Balanced?
  • 7. Family Systems/ Circular Causality • She is depressed because her partner shows no interest; her partner shows no interest because she is depressed—becomes self-perpetuating. • Metaphor is a “hamster wheel” • “family dance” is the family’s patterns of circular interactions/causality • Definition & Demonstration of Circular Causality: Jacob Spillman video at 1.52: https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=2z3EhBqvrPI
  • 8. Ecosystems & Culture • Circular influences between culture & individuals • How individuals enact culture is particular & yet contains cultural themes • People born in other counties • Traditional gender roles may be up-ended • Often have experienced complex trauma • Family ties may have changed • Send money home • Typically work longer hours than others • Typically have lower salaries
  • 9. Macrosystems Issues in Families of Color in US • Poverty common • Unemployment • Some seek other sources of income • Health & Mental Health Issues • Historical trauma • Gender issues • Some males adopt “cool pose” • Some women adopt their own version of cool pose • Language issues • Words activate images, have meaning and impact
  • 10. People of Color in US • Sources of support & identity & sense of belonging • Everyone wants to experience possibilities to achieve personal goals • Dignity & worth foundational • Family & extended family • Community efforts: building communities
  • 11. People of Color in US • Organizations that support child and family development: Northside Achievement Zone • Sports—schools and community • Churches • Gangs especially for young people who are fearful and discouraged • Lack of opportunity can have serious consequences • Young Somali men who become freedom fighters/terrorists
  • 12. Structural Family Therapy • Parents are in charge/Family hierarchy • Key Ideas • Family rules: ex: older children can interrupt & ignore younger children • Patterns of Interactions • Non-productive & frustrating interactions are family systems issues • General Goal: Effective Family Organization & Processes • Therapists’ Role: Active
  • 13. Structural Family Therapy • Grounded in family systems theory • Developed by Minuchin and colleagues for • poor families of color with • organizational difficulties • Seeks to help families reorganize so that • Parents are in charge • Boundaries are clear & flexible • Healthy patterns of interaction are the goals • Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shbX4ww zA_s
  • 14. Components of Family Organization • Family Hierarchy • Parents have more power than children; develop “rules” & reward following of “rules” • Boundaries • Balanced • Diffuse • Rigid • Alignment • Power
  • 15. Principles from Minuchin Center on Family Therapy • strength-based, outcome oriented treatment modality based on ecosystemic principles: • Context organizes us. Our behaviors are a function of our relations with others. The structural therapist focuses on what is taking place among people, rather than on individual psyches. • The family is the primary context, the “matrix of identity” where we develop our selves as we interact with spouses, parents, children, and other family members. The family is in constant transformation, adapting to an ever changing social environment.
  • 16. Principles from Minuchin Center on Family Therapy • Family's structure • recurrent patterns of interaction that its members develop over time, as they accommodate to each other • A well functioning family • Defined not by the absence of stress or conflict, • but by how effectively members handle them • Therapist helps family • To identify and mobilize underutilized strengths to • actualize of its own resources
  • 17. Foundation of • Brief strategic family therapy • Multisystems family therapy • & probably most of the others
  • 18. Basic Ideas • Brief treatment • Behavior problems experienced by one member of the family system are understood as stemming from the family’s patterns of transactions • Example: A parent who allows an older child to be overbearing & hurtful to younger children • The younger child or children may be the focus of parental concern
  • 19. Basic Ideas 2 • Three subsystems • parental • parent-child • sibling • Seek to help families to develop clear roles and boundaries in family subsystems
  • 20. Basic Ideas 3 • Boundaries—are they flexible? • Balanced—turn taking, respect personal space • Rigid—keep others out: isolated & disengaged • Diffuse—not clearly defined to family enmeshment & high reactivity and even chaos • Example of diffuse: waking in on others in bathroom; rummaging through personal effects of others; not listening, interrupting, yelling, name-calling; • Rigid: not sharing person things; silent treatments; not knowing much about others in family
  • 21. Procedures • Joining • a process by which the therapist creates a new subsystem within the family group • Enactments • Interact in session what happens at home • Service provider sees and experiences the patterns of interaction in the sessions
  • 22. Joining • Goal: establish trust • Notice family “style” • How they interact • Words they use • Family affect—low key, loud, mixed • Allow yourself to be part of the family system but also the person charged with facilitating change: keep your analytic stance • Do not ally with any family member • Technical term: Mimesis
  • 23. Joining 2 • Explain how the therapy works • I will ask you to try to new things with me present • I will ask you to try new things at home and then when we are together again we’ll do a check-in about them • How I do things, no one is blamed • I want to help you work together as a family • Ask them if this is okay with them • Ask them to try it and see how it works for them
  • 24. Enactments • Have families talk to each other about an issue that they had been describing • Can then suggest another way of interacting • Example • In the enactment, family members interrupt each other
  • 25. Enactments 2 • You see that frustrates the person being interrupted and the interrupter may feel superior but also frustrated • How about a no-interrupt rule? • Have them practice • Homework • Have them note whether interruptions occur at home and how persons respond to the interruptions
  • 26. Enactments 3 • The interruptions stop but no one responds to what the person said but instead brings up another topic • Ask if they’d like to feel as if someone heard what they say • Explain one part of active listening • Have them practice in session • Homework • Have them note whether anyone appears to hear them at home • In Session • Help them to interact in these new ways
  • 27. Reframing • A different way of looking at/understanding something such as a persons’ behavior or how someone labels a behavior • Involves seeing something from another point of view, usually more favorable and focused on strengths • Might help family members get unstuck from rigid patterns of thinking • The reframe must fit with families’ worldviews • Example • “Mary is too sensitive” • “Do you mean she responds well to praise?”
  • 28. Example of Reframing • Example: helping family members not scapegoat but to see behaviors of an individual as part of a system • Family member: “Robbie is angry all the time” • Therapist: “I wonder if this happens when he feels stuck by something that is happening inside the family”
  • 29. Illustrations of SFT from Research • Reciprocity/circularity • Between 40 and 70% of children whose mothers experience mental health problems meet criteria for a psychiatric disorder • This is more evidence for Importance of family work • Parents often see linear causality • Don’t see connections between their issues & their children’s • Think if children’s behaviors improve, they will feel & function better
  • 30. Findings from a Research Project • Mothers depression symptomology improved • No improvement for children • Problem • Where were therapists’ reports on changes in family interactions that they witnessed in sessions?
  • 31. Number of Sessions Important • Present study: average of 5.6 family sessions. • Every 3-4 weeks (weak dosage) • Clinicians had caseloads of 80-90!!! • Higher than 4.3 in routine treatment settings • 13-17 sessions are typically required in efficacy trials (Hansen et al., 2002).
  • 32. Summary: Seeing SFT • Principles • Family diagrams • Enactments • Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPW0UZd9gQ4