dc.description.abstract |
Orientation: This study explores individual stories of tramna and their dissonance with the
official, dominant discourse on trauma in the South African Police Service (SAPS) from a
systems psychodynamic perspective.
Research purpose: The purpose of the research was, firstly, to explore how trauma experienced
by South African Police Service members is constructed or 'talked about' and made sense of.
Questions and issues that are considered relevant to the primary purpose are: which aspects of
the working environment do members consider to be the most stressful, tramnatic and difficult
to cope with, and what is the effect of the change and transition processes on members' working
experiences?
Motivation for the study: The authors set out to explore the role of systems psychodynamics
in the experience of trauma and stress in the SAPS.
Research design, approach and method: Through this qualitative, explorative, social
phenomenological study, contributing circumstances and processes are included as additional
discourses in an attempt to deepen understanding. The epistemology viewpoint of the study is
found in the social constructionism and the data comprise 15 essays by members of the SAPS,
all of which have been analysed from the perspective of systems psychodynamics.
Main findings: Although the effect of tramna on police officers can never be negated, the way
in which they deal with trauma seems to be different from what was initially believed. Further,
their experience of stress is not solely the result of traumatic experiences but rather the result
of traumatic experiences and systems psychodynamics operating within their organisation -
which includes both organisational stressors or dynamics and transfonnation dynamics.
Practical/managerial implications: The history of psychological trauma indicates that
constructions of traumatic stress are strongly related to cultural, social and political
circumstances. Current psychoanalytic thinking emphasises the meaning of the real occurrence,
which causes trauma by changing the person's experience of the self in relation to self-objects.
Practical implications are the loss of the supportive subculture of the police, the loss of
masculinity, as well as the loss of the power to be competent and meaningful. Furthermore,
feelings of being overwhelmed, powerless and helpless generate anxiety and may have a
significant impact on officers' self-esteem and impede their feelings of omnipotence and
inv ulnerability, which are necessary to cope in the policing environment.
Contribution/value-add: Tite current study found various traumatic and systemspsychodynamic
factors and processes to be anxiety-provoking as a result of exposure to tramna.
Without a supportive social group the anxiety becomes uncontained and unmanageable. |
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