Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-4hhp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-01T15:17:39.431Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Getting away to get it together: Temporary community empowering families to change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 February 2016

Abstract

Camping as an effective tool for change in the lives of individuals and families is well established. However, models which provide a theoretical base for camping with families are rare. This paper provides one such model. Drawing upon many years of experience of camping with disadvantaged groups, the author develops three broad principles which underlie this family camping model. First is the importance of diversity in defining community, enhancing mutuality and encouraging volunteerism. Second is the unique opportunity which temporary community affords for empowerment – releasing the insidious grip of relational power, structural authority and learned helplessness which can stifle personal change, especially for disadvantaged families. The final key element is the natural world and its therapeutic potential to spawn images and experiences which provide the basis for individual and family change.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Andrews, David 1993, ‘Working towards community in our profession’, Zadok Paper, S62.Google Scholar
Berger, Vere 1981, ‘Residential weekends for client families as an aid to case management’, paper presented at the Third International Congress on Child Abuse and Neglect, Amsterdam, April 21–25.Google Scholar
Chapman, Sr Philippa, Debora, Brewer-Eizele, & Stevenson, Liza 1994, Challenge, Choice and Change, Centacare, Tasmania.Google Scholar
Chenery, Mary Faeth 1993, ‘Explaining the value of camping’, address to the Annual Conference of the Camping Association of Victoria.Google Scholar
Crossley, Rosemary 1984, ‘I would prefer to be blind’, Equal Opportunity Forum, No 18 Google Scholar
Handley, Ray 1992, ‘The wilderness within: wilderness enhanced program for behaviour disordered adolescents: a cybernetic systemic model’, paper presented to the Fourth National Conference on Children with Emotional or Behaviour Problems, October.Google Scholar
Handley, Ray 1990, The wilderness as the therapist: leaving it all to nature, paper presented to the National Symposium on Wilderness/Outdoor Programs for Offenders, Canberra, October.Google Scholar
Hannah, Digby 1991, ‘Temporary community, permanent outcomes’, Zadok Perspectives, No 46.Google Scholar
Hannah, Digby 1994, ‘All about rivers: metaphor in education and learning’, Zadok Perspectives, No 44.Google Scholar
Hannah, Digby 1995, ‘Upside down camps: empowerment through temporary community’, Zadok Perspectives, No 48.Google Scholar
Kelk, Norman 1994, ‘Camping and outdoor activities as psychosocial interventions’, Australian Social Work, Vol 47, No 2.Google Scholar
Myers, David G 1992, Psychology, Worth, Holland Michigan, pp. 490, 519520.Google Scholar
O’Brien, Wendy 1991, ‘Making parent education relevant to vulnerable parents’, Children Australia, Vol 16, No 2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Owen, Mary Jane (1985), ‘One last bastion of segregation: it is time to integrate people with disabilities into our society’, Public Welfare, Vol 43, No 3.Google Scholar
Schulz, C., Wilson, S., Newton, M., Van Epenhuysen, P. and Holzworth, B. 1991, ‘Residential family treatment: a creative alternative in child protection work’, Children Australia, Vol 16, No 1.Google Scholar
Shoel, J., Prouty, R. & Radcliffe, P. 1988, Islands of Healing: a guide to adventure based counseling. Project Adventure, Hamilton MA.Google Scholar
Scott, John 1991, ‘Outdoor wilderness education: therapeutic intervention with institutionalised adolescents’, Australian Social Work, Vol 44, No 3.Google Scholar
Slater, Tom 1984, The temporary community: organised camping for urbanised society, Albatross, Sutherland, NSW.Google Scholar
Stolz, P. & West, J. 1995, ‘Gippsland Wilderness Enhanced Program: theory, history and outline’, OWEP Report Google Scholar
Stolz, Paul 1996, ‘The Shipping News: Michael White’s narrative therapy and wilderness enhanced programs: stories of change’, NAFT Journal.Google Scholar
Strupp, H. 1986, ‘Psychotherapy: Research, practice and public policy (how to avoid dead ends)’, American Psychologist, 41, 120–130, p. 560.Google Scholar
Tacey, David 1995, Edge of the Sacred: transformation in Australia, Harper Collins, Melbourne.Google Scholar
Van Matre, Steve 1990, The Earth Speaks: an acclimatization Journal, Institute for Earth Education, Illinois Google Scholar
White, Michael 1989, ‘The externalizing of the problem and the re-authoring of lives and relationships’, Dulwich Centre Newsletter, Summer 1989.Google Scholar
White, Michael 1991, ‘Deconstruction and therapy’, Dulwich Centre Newsletter, No 3, 1991.Google Scholar