NOTEWORTHY

Multilateralism

 

therapy talk

Recently on the AAMFT Blog, AAMFT Clinical Fellow Laurie L Charlés, PhD, LMFT, wrote: Multilateral, a term more utilized in international politics rather than family therapy, is about collaboration, and about working together across borders and sovereign states on global issues. Systemic thinkers are natural multilateralists—skilled at lateral engagement—able to work across multiple settings, inclined toward collaboration. Multilateralism is a key part of success to overcoming global issues, as nations must work together alongside each other and across many disciplines to deliver sustainable solutions to their citizens. It is a mindset very much needed in a global emergency. However, as systemic family therapists keenly noted at the [AAMFT20 virtual conference], not everyone’s local pandemic is the same. Your global “zip code” matters, so to speak. Inequities are especially graphic and vivid in complex emergencies, in whatever zip code they occur. A pandemic is just such an emergency, but it is different in Beirut than it is in Boston. Its global universality adds unique layers of specific urgency onto locally pre-existing conditions. Inequities are illuminated in sharp relief. The inequities may appear as if they occurred “overnight;” however, it is only that what is perhaps hidden or less obvious “before” the emergency is more striking and graphic “during,” and most certainly will be, “after.” Systems thinking promotes our ability to understand this figure/ground narrative very well. It is a mindset very much needed to respond to a global emergency.


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data note

Americans are more likely than people in other countries to report mental health concerns. Percent of adults who reported experiencing stress, anxiety, or great sadness that was difficult to cope with alone since the outbreak started:

F21 Data note stats

Source: Commonwealth Fund, August 2020.


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