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Relational Ethics and Moral Imagination in Contemporary Systemic Practice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 February 2012

Elisabeth Shaw*
Affiliation:
Private Practice, [email protected]
*
*Address for correspondence: Elisabeth Shaw, 32 Marlborough Street, Drummoyne NSW 2047, Australia.
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Abstract

This article discusses an approach to relational ethics in contemporary systemic practice. It explores the possibilities offered by traditions of moral philosophy in attending to problems from a relational ethics perspective. This includes a focus on relationships as a crucial element in the development and maintenance of a moral self and how couples and families construct an ethical platform together, both consciously and unconsciously; and also how relational ethics may inform ideas about the values-driven problems people present in therapy. Finally, it suggests how ethical responsibility and accountability can be constructed as relational responsiveness. Despite our associations with morality as judgmental and rule driven, moral conduct and decision-making can involve imaginative, creative and aesthetic possibilities.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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