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Non-violent Resistance Programme

Guidelines for Parents, Care Staff and Volunteers Working with Adolescen
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Non-violent Resistance Programme includes ten sessions for people working with parents and carers of children and young people with violent, destructive and harmful behaviours. It uses the principles of non-violent resistance (NVR) to help carers to resist violent or out of control behaviours and to establish a warm, loving and containing parental presence with their children. The programme is designed to be used with groups of parents, but the concepts and activities can be used with individuals. Key features: Based on a evidence-based model of good practice provides a tried and tested programme which brings about positive change powerful video role plays to illustrate principles in practice engaging materials and activities for parents and carers. The National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) (2006) recommends group-based parent training/education programmes in the management of children under 12 with conduct disorders. GPs, social workers, children's mental health services and voluntary organisations receive many requests for help from parents and carers who are concerned about extreme behaviours in their children (violence, school refusal, drug taking, social withdrawal, criminal behaviour). Many of these young people have other difficulties, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), conduct disorder (CD) or oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) or have experienced family breakdown or domestic violence. NVR is a new type of intervention derived from the work of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King and developed in the last 10 years for children and young people with extreme anti-social behaviours. Rather than focusing on modifying behaviour, the aim is to bring about changes in the parent-child relationship and to help parents, grandparents, foster carers and informal carers to create positive relationships with their children in the long term. This NVR programme teaches parents essential skills that help them resist out-of-control and violent behaviours and develop a collaborative, solution-focused approach to problems (for example, de-escalating conflicts, increasing parental presence, announcing their decision to make a stand, sit-ins, developing support networks). They learn to counter giving into their child's demands or responding in a reactive way which can lead to even more violence. Non-violent Resistance Programme consists of ten 1.5 hour sessions which include mini presentations, outcome-focused activities, discussion and video role plays. Structured homework tasks help reinforce the ideas from the session and make an active connection to situations with their children. Facilitators should have some experience of group work and training, ideally in a therapeutic environment.
Elisabeth Heismann is a teacher, systems therapist, supervisor and trainer. Together with colleagues, she delivered and led the NVR parent groups within the Oxleas Mental Health Foundation Trust. Elisabeth also developed and ran specialist NVR community groups for parents whose children are in gangs or affected by child sexual exploitation. After retirement from the NHS, she co-founded the community enterprise company NVR Action and Practice CIC, offering bespoke NVR training packages for parents and professionals. Julia Jude is a lecturer at Goldmiths, University of London, a visiting lecturer at the University of Bedforshire, a systemic and group psychotherapist, supervisor, researcher and co-director of NVR Action and Practice CIC. She has researched the practice of indigenous ideas as a way of providing an alternative therapeutic frame to the contribution of indigenous literature and research within systemic and social work practice and education. Elizabeth Day is a systemic psychotherapist, supervisor, artist and educator. She established the first NVR group programme in partnership with colleagues in Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust). Now retired from full-time NHS work, she has an honorary position as a family therapist in an adult mental health team and maintains a small private therapy and supervision practice. She is a deputy editor of 'Murmurations: Journal of Transformative Systemic Practice'.
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