Transforming Trauma : A Relational Approach to Disorganizing Systemic Violence
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
0197783953
ISBN-13
9780197783955
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint
Oxford University Press Inc
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Oct 22nd, 2025
Print length
312 Pages
Product Classification:
PsychologyHealth psychologyClinical psychology
Ksh 11,900.00
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Just like people can be traumatized, so too can organizations. Transforming Trauma not only notices how responses to trauma show up in organizational practices and processes, but how to change them. Although organizational trauma responses are wise in the short term, they can become harmful if they endure. To prevent a traumatized organization from becoming a traumatizing organization, Harris offers ways to improve relationships not only among people, but among parts of the organization. By adopting these transformational practices, organizations can play a key role in ending systems of violence, including violence connected to race and gender.
Transforming Trauma emerges from contemporary, overlapping social challenges: Global losses of life and connection amidst the COVID-19 pandemic; brutal US police murders of Black and brown people followed by uprisings against systemic racism; and organizing against pervasive gender-based and sexual violence. In the wake of these historical and ongoing events, many people have experienced personal and collective trauma. Although much has been written about how individuals can resolve their personal traumas, and some literature reflects on healing collective trauma, little has been written about how organizations themselves experience trauma and can transform it. This book takes up that work. It does so by relying on relational theories, ways of thinking/being that encompass feminist new materialism, affect theory, intersectionality, and transformative justice. Together, relational theories share this premise: the world consists not of static, separate entities, but of constantly reconfigured connections and interactions. Transformative change, it follows, comes not from “fixing” any one person or organization, but through creating better relationships. Grounded in this framework, Harris argues that abusive relational dynamics-outcomes of and contributors to misogyny, anti-queerness, white supremacy, and additional related oppressions-pattern not only dyadic interactions but also entire organizations. She shows how these organizational patterns are sometimes the result of unresolved trauma, and offers ways for organizations to shift these dynamics or, as the book''s subtitle suggests, to disorganize systemic violence.
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