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Systems-Centered Therapy
for Groups
In contrast to most therapies, which encourage the therapist to observe and follow the movement of the group as it unfolds, the SCT approach requires therapists to immediately bring defenses to clients' attention while simultaneously teaching them the skills they need to modify them. The book identifies three discrete phases in group developmentauthority, intimacy, and work - and shows how treatment in each phase comprises a sequenced hierarchy of defense modifications, beginning with the simplest and progressing to the most complex. Portraying SCT work as a partnership in which the therapist governs the structure of the therapy and clients make a series of manageable choices at different "forks-in-the-road," Agazarian describes each group meeting as a cohesive "minitherapy" which allows participants to work on problems of varying degrees in a timely and efficient fashion.