2016
DOI: 10.1080/17454832.2016.1245768
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Art workshop with Haitian street children in a post-earthquake context: Resilience, relationship and socialisation

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Cited by 10 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The test has since been rebranded for use in research with children and adults (Adamis et al, 2016;Atanu, Dogra, & Das, 2011;Bat Or & Ishai, 2019;Calvo, 2017;Del Greco et al, 2018;Guillemin, 2004;Klingemann & Klingemann, 2016;Moagi, 2014;Stewart & Brosh, 1997). Authors have used drawings as data collection tools in natural disaster research, including art therapy after natural disasters (Lee, 2018), impact of cyclones (Haring & Sorin, 2016), the depiction of Hurricane Katrina (Kelley-Romano & Westgate, 2007), earthquakes in Haiti (Brolles et al, 2017), and disaster trauma (Roysircar et al, 2019).…”
Section: Participant Drawingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The test has since been rebranded for use in research with children and adults (Adamis et al, 2016;Atanu, Dogra, & Das, 2011;Bat Or & Ishai, 2019;Calvo, 2017;Del Greco et al, 2018;Guillemin, 2004;Klingemann & Klingemann, 2016;Moagi, 2014;Stewart & Brosh, 1997). Authors have used drawings as data collection tools in natural disaster research, including art therapy after natural disasters (Lee, 2018), impact of cyclones (Haring & Sorin, 2016), the depiction of Hurricane Katrina (Kelley-Romano & Westgate, 2007), earthquakes in Haiti (Brolles et al, 2017), and disaster trauma (Roysircar et al, 2019).…”
Section: Participant Drawingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The test has since been rebranded for use in research with children and adults (Adamis et al, 2016;Atanu, Dogra, & Das, 2011;Bat Or & Ishai, 2019;Calvo, 2017;Del Greco et al, 2018;Guillemin, 2004;Klingemann & Klingemann, 2016;Moagi, 2014;Stewart & Brosh, 1997). Authors have used drawings as data collection tools in natural disaster research, including art therapy after natural disasters (Lee, 2018), impact of cyclones (Haring & Sorin, 2016), the depiction of Hurricane Katrina (Kelley-Romano & Westgate, 2007), earthquakes in Haiti (Brolles et al, 2017), and disaster trauma (Roysircar et al, 2019).…”
Section: Participant Drawingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…I hope it may help Art Therapists look back on our own trainings and the relationships between our cultural backgrounds and the interpretations/use of our learning. The article by Brolles et al (2017) springs to mind as an example in this journal where the cultural context is very different from what we may have experienced as students, particularly in the UK. In future it may be necessary for Art Therapists to have sophisticated understandings of the potentially very diverse cultural contexts in which Art Therapy may be deliveredso I am grateful to this author for giving us a well-considered perspective on UK-based training: this should be helpful in considering Art Therapy when it is developed in new contexts.…”
Section: Editorialmentioning
confidence: 99%