Systemic intervention

Systemic intervention is a deliberate operation by intervening agents that seeks people to make alterations in their lives[1][2] in psychology.

This analyses how people deal with challenges in the contemporary era, including their power relations and how they reform relationship with others.

Systemic Intervention Models looks for the awareness of other agents with the focus of counteracting issues with professionalisation when applicable.

[3] This group does not have to share an equivalent purpose to the systemic intervention however requires a dominant intention at group-degree meaning.

The action of degrading disempowerment effects and exposing agents to professional imagery broaden peoples perspective on the possibilities of developing reflective knowledge and change.

[1] However, Flood and Jackson disagreed saying that it should be called 'commitments' instead of 'themes for debate' in which Midgley was against as the word commitment implicates uncritical recognition.

[3] Sustainable improvement is when the positive change is made to possible indefinite future without the presence of undesired ramifications.

[2] This value judgement derived from the boundary, deciding on who is to be consulted and involved as well as what issues are comprised in the systemic intervention action.

[3] The most ethical systemic intervention groundwork practice is by expanding the boundary so that additional stakeholders beliefs and concerns would be accounted for.

[5] The theory of marginalisation is concluded from different value judgement and boundaries will cause collusion within the groups of stakeholders or issues[1][6] where they might be devalued or worse, obliterated.

[2] The process of marginalisation is significant to systemic intervention as it comprehensively analyses the critiques based on local situations by addressing the concerns with power and participation that have been neglected.

[1] The standpoint will then be overlaid with societal custom that is meant to symbolically express and strengthen the stereotypes of 'sacredness' and 'profanity' set on the marginalised stakeholders and concerns.

In Systemic Intervention for family, people are encouraged to attend therapy and recovery camps to intervene their problems.

[8] This systemic intervention allows the better family relationship as they will learn to understand one another such as how their behaviour affect the other person, through the therapy.

Methodology Approach
Family Therapy Clinic