Inhoud
ABSTRACT
The phenomena of father’s absence and the disruption of a family unit due to social justice issues like incarceration and mental
health/substance misuse challenges are widely documented, and their effects on the whole family are well established in the
literature. This paper specifically examines how systemic inequities like racism contribute to destructive entitlements that can
occur transgenerationally within families affected by father’s absence. The consideration of racial trauma is crucial, as father’s
absence and family disruption are not limited to any one racial or ethnic group, but the effects are often exacerbated for families
of color due to the intersecting impacts of systemic racism. This paper highlights contextual family therapy (CFT) concepts,
such as multidirected partiality, destructive entitlements, and exoneration, as they apply to these families within the context of
racial trauma. Family therapists using a CFT approach with families impacted by incarceration, mental health, and/or substance
misuse should address racial trauma as a key component influencing each family member as well as the family dynamics. A
clinical case example is used to demonstrate the application of CFT in supporting rejunctive moves toward healing parent– and
adult–child relationships within these resilient families.
Family Process 64(1)
Gift Nleko & Nicole Sabatini Gutierrez (2025). Rejunctive Moves Toward Systemic Healing: A Contextual Family Therapy Approach to Father’s Absence. <p><span style="box-sizing:border-box;"><strong>Family Process 64(1)</strong></span></p>