Abstract
When dealing with children and youth who experience distressing events, psychosocial diagnostics and healing programmes principally resort to biomedical models. Children are often viewed as individualised ‘victims’ suffering from trauma and ‘in need’ of outside help. Highlighting case studies from Madagascar and Nepal, this article argues that the biomedical approach to trauma would be strengthened by a concomitant analysis of social networks, including the perceived relations with the supernatural. The various tandems of family and kin relationships, the living and the dead, constitute not only a social ‘levee’ breached by distressing events, but also the locus around which social relations are rebuilt.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 423-433 |
| Journal | Children and Society |
| Volume | 30 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 27 Mar 2016 |
Keywords
- children and post-traumatic stress
- holistic cosmologies
- interdisciplinary treatment strategies
- resilience
- social networks and children
- trauma intervention
Themes from the UHS research agenda
- Life course, loss and grief