Houston Galveston Institute
The Houston Galveston Institute is a non-profit organization that offers collaborative counselling and postmodern therapy to individuals, families and communities. The institute is strongly associated with collaborative language systems, a type of postmodern therapy that works with clients via a cooperative partnership to access their own natural resources and develop solutions to their problems. The Houston Galveston Institute is a sponsor of the International Journal of Collaborative Practices.
History
The Houston Galveston Institute dates back to the 1950s at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, Texas, with the federally funded family therapy project to research the Multiple impact therapy. In 1978, the Galveston Family Institute was established by Harlene Anderson, Ph.D.,, Ph.D.,, and George Pulliam, M.S.W. to meet the demands of mental health professionals seeking to increase their understanding of families and further develop their skills in systems-oriented therapy with individuals, couples, families, and groups. From this group, and later including Harold Goolishian's protege Dr. Neil F. Ravella and Lee Winderman, the ideas of Collaborative Language System Theory emerged. The institute officially became the Houston Galveston Institute in the 1990s when the project expanded beyond Galveston. Other contributors are Diane Gehart, Sue Levin, Diana Carleton, Lynn Hoffmann, Tom Andersen, Vivien Burr, John Cromby, Kenneth Gergen, Mary Gergen, Lois Holzman, Imelda McCarthy, Susan McDaniel, Sheila McNamee, Robert Neimeyer, David Nightingale, Peggy Penn, Sallyann Roth, Jaakko Seikkula, John Shotter, Lois Shawver, and Michael White.It was originally located in Houston's Montrose area.
Collaborative approach
This type of approach formed at Houston Galveston Institute is that “problems are not solved, but dissolved in language.” Collaborative therapy is now recognized as one of the current schools of family therapy and is included in graduate school textbooks. Some of the general philosophic assumptions of the theory are:- Maintaining Skepticism – A critical attitude about how knowledge is ‘known’
- Eluding Generalizations – Avoid the dominant discourse
- Knowledge as an Interactive Social Process – Dialectic, conversational knowledge
- Privileging Local Knowledge – Persons and communities know themselves
- Language as a Creative Social Process – Language creates our knowledge
- Knowledge and Language as Transforming – Conversations change people
- Postmodern is only One of Many Narratives – One of many languages
- Mutually Inquiring Conversational Partnership – Therapy as a partnership
- Relational Expertise – Client and therapist bring their expertise together
- Not-Knowing – Humility before the client
- Being Public – Therapist is open with their thoughts
- Living with Uncertainty – Enjoy the spontaneity of a conversation
- Mutually Transforming – Hermeneutic circle, reciprocal effect on client and therapist
- Orienting towards Everyday Ordinary Life – Tap into natural resilience of clients.