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Integrative Therapy: 100 Key Points and Techniques provides a concise and accessible guide which allows professionals and students to look outside of their own approaches, in order to draw upon techniques that will best help the client.
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Integrative Therapy: 100 Key Points and Techniques provides a concise and accessible guide which allows professionals and students to look outside of their own approaches, in order to draw upon techniques that will best help the client.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- 100 Key Points
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 266
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. November 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 198mm x 129mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 290g
- ISBN-13: 9780415413770
- ISBN-10: 041541377X
- Artikelnr.: 31301297
- 100 Key Points
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 266
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. November 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 198mm x 129mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 290g
- ISBN-13: 9780415413770
- ISBN-10: 041541377X
- Artikelnr.: 31301297
Maria Gilbert is currently Joint Head of the Integrative Department at Metanoia Institute in London. She is Programme Leader of the MSc in Integrative Psychotherapy and of the MA/MSc in Coaching Psychology at Metanoia. Vanja Orlans is Programme Leader of the Doctorate in Counselling Psychology and Psychotherapy by Professional Studies (DCPsych), a joint programme of Metanoia Institute and Middlesex University. She is also Joint Head of the Integrative Department at Metanoia.
Acknowledgements. PART I: The Case for an Integrative Approach to
Psychotherapy. The Current Professional Context. Philosophy, Values and
Ethics Supporting an Integrative Framework for Practice . Criticisms of
Integration. Competencies for an Integrative Psychotherapy. Our Framework
for an Integrative Psychotherapy. PART II: A Review of the Literature on
Integration. The History of Integration. Definitions of Integration.
Theoretical Integration: Meta-Theoretical Models. Support for Integration
from Outcome Research. Common Factors as a Basis for Integration. The
Client as the Most Important 'Common Factor' in Change . Technical
Eclecticism. Assimilative Integration. Complementarity: Combining two
methods. Affective neuroscience and integration. PART III: The Centrality
of Relationship from the Time of Infancy. The Primacy of Affect in
Development. Early Experience and the Development of the Brain. Affect
Regulation and the Development of Self. Affective neuroscience: The work of
Panksepp and Damasio. The Social Brain: The Function of the Orbitofrontal
Cortex. Attachment Styles: The Work of Bowlby and Colleagues.
Intergenerational Patterns of Attachment . Infant Observation Studies: The
work of Stern and Others. Winnicott and the Ordinary 'Good Enough' Mother.
Affect Dysregulation and Adult Pathology: The Work of Schore. Early
Relational Trauma and its Effects. Self and Interactive Regulation
Throughout the Lifespan. PART IV: Dimensions of Self Development. The
Co-Created Self in Relationship. Different Dimensions of Self Experience.
The Biological: Relationship of Self to Body. The Intrapsychic:
Relationship of Self to Self. The Interpersonal and Intersubjective:
Relationship of Self to Others. The Intercultural Dimension: Culture, Race
and Wider Context. The Transpersonal Dimension. Internalised Relationship
Maps: RIG's, Schema and Internal Working Models. Developing a Narrative to
Make Sense of Life - and Psychotherapy. Mentalization: Developing the
Reflective Function. Traumatic Memory Processes and Dissociation. PART V:
Problem Formulation for the Integrative Psychotherapist. Drawing on a Range
of Concepts for Problem Formulation. Relational Perspectives on Problem
Formulation. Diagnosis and the DSM-IV-TR: Pros and Cons. Anxiety and
Depression: Common Presenting Issues. From Personality Style to Personality
Disorder. Developmental Perspectives in Problem Formulation. Existential
Life Issues in Problem Formulation. Chronic Relational Trauma and Single
Traumatic Events. Complex Post -Traumatic Stress Disorder. Constructing an
Integrative Problem Formulation. PART VI: The Process of Integrative
Psychotherapy. The First Session: Important Considerations. What Therapy
for Which Client in What Context? Psychotherapeutic Change: The Role of
Love and Hope. Assessment in Psychotherapy. Therapeutic Relationship
Dimensions: An Overview. The Working Alliance and Effective Therapy. The
Person-to-Person or 'Real' Relationship. Transference and
Countertransference. The Reparative or Developmentally Needed Relationship.
The Transpersonal Relationship. The Representational Relationship.
Different Views on Working with the Transference. Repetitive and Selfobject
Dimensions of the Transference . Implicit and Explicit Levels of
Relationship. The Co-Created Unconscious or 'Analytic Third'. Reciprocal
Mutual Influence: A Two-Person Psychology . Conceptions of Time in
Integrative Psychotherapy. Inclusion: A Process Goal of Therapy . An
Integrative Approach to Trauma. Therapeutic Alliance Ruptures: Research and
Clinical Perspectives. The Integrative Psychotherapist as Researcher.
Developing One's Own Unique Style of Integration. PART VII: Techniques and
Strategies for the Integrative Psychotherapist. Implicit Relational
Knowing: Working with Self and Interactive Regulation. Working with
Unconscious Process and Unformulated Experience. Empathic Enquiry and
Empathic Resonance: Recognition Precedes Interpretation. Empathic
Attunement. Sexuality, Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation. Body
Awareness Techniques. An Overview of Therapeutic Interventions. Heightened
Affective Moments: Working with Improvisation and Spontaneity in
Psychotherapy. Working with Kohut's Self-Object dimensions of the
Transference. Working with The 'Script' as a Narrative Approach. Working
with Dissociation: Possible Strategies. Working with Shame and Shame-Based
Systems. Mindfulness Techniques. Inner Dialogue Between Different Self
States . Working with Symbolism and Metaphor. Working with Dreams. Working
with Erotic Transference. The Therapist's Use of the 'Self' in the
Therapeutic Process. Working with Countertransference. Self Disclosure in
Psychotherapy: Uses and Abuses. Addressing the Process of Rupture and
Repair. Working with Enactments and Therapeutic Impasse. Accepting and
Working with Mistakes. PART VIII: Ethics and Professional Practice. A
Process Stance on Ethics. Anti-Oppressive Practice. Professionalism in
Practice. The Wider Field of Psychotherapy. The Shadow Side of
Psychotherapy Organisations. Challenges for the Integrative
Psychotherapist. Reflections.
Psychotherapy. The Current Professional Context. Philosophy, Values and
Ethics Supporting an Integrative Framework for Practice . Criticisms of
Integration. Competencies for an Integrative Psychotherapy. Our Framework
for an Integrative Psychotherapy. PART II: A Review of the Literature on
Integration. The History of Integration. Definitions of Integration.
Theoretical Integration: Meta-Theoretical Models. Support for Integration
from Outcome Research. Common Factors as a Basis for Integration. The
Client as the Most Important 'Common Factor' in Change . Technical
Eclecticism. Assimilative Integration. Complementarity: Combining two
methods. Affective neuroscience and integration. PART III: The Centrality
of Relationship from the Time of Infancy. The Primacy of Affect in
Development. Early Experience and the Development of the Brain. Affect
Regulation and the Development of Self. Affective neuroscience: The work of
Panksepp and Damasio. The Social Brain: The Function of the Orbitofrontal
Cortex. Attachment Styles: The Work of Bowlby and Colleagues.
Intergenerational Patterns of Attachment . Infant Observation Studies: The
work of Stern and Others. Winnicott and the Ordinary 'Good Enough' Mother.
Affect Dysregulation and Adult Pathology: The Work of Schore. Early
Relational Trauma and its Effects. Self and Interactive Regulation
Throughout the Lifespan. PART IV: Dimensions of Self Development. The
Co-Created Self in Relationship. Different Dimensions of Self Experience.
The Biological: Relationship of Self to Body. The Intrapsychic:
Relationship of Self to Self. The Interpersonal and Intersubjective:
Relationship of Self to Others. The Intercultural Dimension: Culture, Race
and Wider Context. The Transpersonal Dimension. Internalised Relationship
Maps: RIG's, Schema and Internal Working Models. Developing a Narrative to
Make Sense of Life - and Psychotherapy. Mentalization: Developing the
Reflective Function. Traumatic Memory Processes and Dissociation. PART V:
Problem Formulation for the Integrative Psychotherapist. Drawing on a Range
of Concepts for Problem Formulation. Relational Perspectives on Problem
Formulation. Diagnosis and the DSM-IV-TR: Pros and Cons. Anxiety and
Depression: Common Presenting Issues. From Personality Style to Personality
Disorder. Developmental Perspectives in Problem Formulation. Existential
Life Issues in Problem Formulation. Chronic Relational Trauma and Single
Traumatic Events. Complex Post -Traumatic Stress Disorder. Constructing an
Integrative Problem Formulation. PART VI: The Process of Integrative
Psychotherapy. The First Session: Important Considerations. What Therapy
for Which Client in What Context? Psychotherapeutic Change: The Role of
Love and Hope. Assessment in Psychotherapy. Therapeutic Relationship
Dimensions: An Overview. The Working Alliance and Effective Therapy. The
Person-to-Person or 'Real' Relationship. Transference and
Countertransference. The Reparative or Developmentally Needed Relationship.
The Transpersonal Relationship. The Representational Relationship.
Different Views on Working with the Transference. Repetitive and Selfobject
Dimensions of the Transference . Implicit and Explicit Levels of
Relationship. The Co-Created Unconscious or 'Analytic Third'. Reciprocal
Mutual Influence: A Two-Person Psychology . Conceptions of Time in
Integrative Psychotherapy. Inclusion: A Process Goal of Therapy . An
Integrative Approach to Trauma. Therapeutic Alliance Ruptures: Research and
Clinical Perspectives. The Integrative Psychotherapist as Researcher.
Developing One's Own Unique Style of Integration. PART VII: Techniques and
Strategies for the Integrative Psychotherapist. Implicit Relational
Knowing: Working with Self and Interactive Regulation. Working with
Unconscious Process and Unformulated Experience. Empathic Enquiry and
Empathic Resonance: Recognition Precedes Interpretation. Empathic
Attunement. Sexuality, Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation. Body
Awareness Techniques. An Overview of Therapeutic Interventions. Heightened
Affective Moments: Working with Improvisation and Spontaneity in
Psychotherapy. Working with Kohut's Self-Object dimensions of the
Transference. Working with The 'Script' as a Narrative Approach. Working
with Dissociation: Possible Strategies. Working with Shame and Shame-Based
Systems. Mindfulness Techniques. Inner Dialogue Between Different Self
States . Working with Symbolism and Metaphor. Working with Dreams. Working
with Erotic Transference. The Therapist's Use of the 'Self' in the
Therapeutic Process. Working with Countertransference. Self Disclosure in
Psychotherapy: Uses and Abuses. Addressing the Process of Rupture and
Repair. Working with Enactments and Therapeutic Impasse. Accepting and
Working with Mistakes. PART VIII: Ethics and Professional Practice. A
Process Stance on Ethics. Anti-Oppressive Practice. Professionalism in
Practice. The Wider Field of Psychotherapy. The Shadow Side of
Psychotherapy Organisations. Challenges for the Integrative
Psychotherapist. Reflections.
Acknowledgements. PART I: The Case for an Integrative Approach to
Psychotherapy. The Current Professional Context. Philosophy, Values and
Ethics Supporting an Integrative Framework for Practice . Criticisms of
Integration. Competencies for an Integrative Psychotherapy. Our Framework
for an Integrative Psychotherapy. PART II: A Review of the Literature on
Integration. The History of Integration. Definitions of Integration.
Theoretical Integration: Meta-Theoretical Models. Support for Integration
from Outcome Research. Common Factors as a Basis for Integration. The
Client as the Most Important 'Common Factor' in Change . Technical
Eclecticism. Assimilative Integration. Complementarity: Combining two
methods. Affective neuroscience and integration. PART III: The Centrality
of Relationship from the Time of Infancy. The Primacy of Affect in
Development. Early Experience and the Development of the Brain. Affect
Regulation and the Development of Self. Affective neuroscience: The work of
Panksepp and Damasio. The Social Brain: The Function of the Orbitofrontal
Cortex. Attachment Styles: The Work of Bowlby and Colleagues.
Intergenerational Patterns of Attachment . Infant Observation Studies: The
work of Stern and Others. Winnicott and the Ordinary 'Good Enough' Mother.
Affect Dysregulation and Adult Pathology: The Work of Schore. Early
Relational Trauma and its Effects. Self and Interactive Regulation
Throughout the Lifespan. PART IV: Dimensions of Self Development. The
Co-Created Self in Relationship. Different Dimensions of Self Experience.
The Biological: Relationship of Self to Body. The Intrapsychic:
Relationship of Self to Self. The Interpersonal and Intersubjective:
Relationship of Self to Others. The Intercultural Dimension: Culture, Race
and Wider Context. The Transpersonal Dimension. Internalised Relationship
Maps: RIG's, Schema and Internal Working Models. Developing a Narrative to
Make Sense of Life - and Psychotherapy. Mentalization: Developing the
Reflective Function. Traumatic Memory Processes and Dissociation. PART V:
Problem Formulation for the Integrative Psychotherapist. Drawing on a Range
of Concepts for Problem Formulation. Relational Perspectives on Problem
Formulation. Diagnosis and the DSM-IV-TR: Pros and Cons. Anxiety and
Depression: Common Presenting Issues. From Personality Style to Personality
Disorder. Developmental Perspectives in Problem Formulation. Existential
Life Issues in Problem Formulation. Chronic Relational Trauma and Single
Traumatic Events. Complex Post -Traumatic Stress Disorder. Constructing an
Integrative Problem Formulation. PART VI: The Process of Integrative
Psychotherapy. The First Session: Important Considerations. What Therapy
for Which Client in What Context? Psychotherapeutic Change: The Role of
Love and Hope. Assessment in Psychotherapy. Therapeutic Relationship
Dimensions: An Overview. The Working Alliance and Effective Therapy. The
Person-to-Person or 'Real' Relationship. Transference and
Countertransference. The Reparative or Developmentally Needed Relationship.
The Transpersonal Relationship. The Representational Relationship.
Different Views on Working with the Transference. Repetitive and Selfobject
Dimensions of the Transference . Implicit and Explicit Levels of
Relationship. The Co-Created Unconscious or 'Analytic Third'. Reciprocal
Mutual Influence: A Two-Person Psychology . Conceptions of Time in
Integrative Psychotherapy. Inclusion: A Process Goal of Therapy . An
Integrative Approach to Trauma. Therapeutic Alliance Ruptures: Research and
Clinical Perspectives. The Integrative Psychotherapist as Researcher.
Developing One's Own Unique Style of Integration. PART VII: Techniques and
Strategies for the Integrative Psychotherapist. Implicit Relational
Knowing: Working with Self and Interactive Regulation. Working with
Unconscious Process and Unformulated Experience. Empathic Enquiry and
Empathic Resonance: Recognition Precedes Interpretation. Empathic
Attunement. Sexuality, Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation. Body
Awareness Techniques. An Overview of Therapeutic Interventions. Heightened
Affective Moments: Working with Improvisation and Spontaneity in
Psychotherapy. Working with Kohut's Self-Object dimensions of the
Transference. Working with The 'Script' as a Narrative Approach. Working
with Dissociation: Possible Strategies. Working with Shame and Shame-Based
Systems. Mindfulness Techniques. Inner Dialogue Between Different Self
States . Working with Symbolism and Metaphor. Working with Dreams. Working
with Erotic Transference. The Therapist's Use of the 'Self' in the
Therapeutic Process. Working with Countertransference. Self Disclosure in
Psychotherapy: Uses and Abuses. Addressing the Process of Rupture and
Repair. Working with Enactments and Therapeutic Impasse. Accepting and
Working with Mistakes. PART VIII: Ethics and Professional Practice. A
Process Stance on Ethics. Anti-Oppressive Practice. Professionalism in
Practice. The Wider Field of Psychotherapy. The Shadow Side of
Psychotherapy Organisations. Challenges for the Integrative
Psychotherapist. Reflections.
Psychotherapy. The Current Professional Context. Philosophy, Values and
Ethics Supporting an Integrative Framework for Practice . Criticisms of
Integration. Competencies for an Integrative Psychotherapy. Our Framework
for an Integrative Psychotherapy. PART II: A Review of the Literature on
Integration. The History of Integration. Definitions of Integration.
Theoretical Integration: Meta-Theoretical Models. Support for Integration
from Outcome Research. Common Factors as a Basis for Integration. The
Client as the Most Important 'Common Factor' in Change . Technical
Eclecticism. Assimilative Integration. Complementarity: Combining two
methods. Affective neuroscience and integration. PART III: The Centrality
of Relationship from the Time of Infancy. The Primacy of Affect in
Development. Early Experience and the Development of the Brain. Affect
Regulation and the Development of Self. Affective neuroscience: The work of
Panksepp and Damasio. The Social Brain: The Function of the Orbitofrontal
Cortex. Attachment Styles: The Work of Bowlby and Colleagues.
Intergenerational Patterns of Attachment . Infant Observation Studies: The
work of Stern and Others. Winnicott and the Ordinary 'Good Enough' Mother.
Affect Dysregulation and Adult Pathology: The Work of Schore. Early
Relational Trauma and its Effects. Self and Interactive Regulation
Throughout the Lifespan. PART IV: Dimensions of Self Development. The
Co-Created Self in Relationship. Different Dimensions of Self Experience.
The Biological: Relationship of Self to Body. The Intrapsychic:
Relationship of Self to Self. The Interpersonal and Intersubjective:
Relationship of Self to Others. The Intercultural Dimension: Culture, Race
and Wider Context. The Transpersonal Dimension. Internalised Relationship
Maps: RIG's, Schema and Internal Working Models. Developing a Narrative to
Make Sense of Life - and Psychotherapy. Mentalization: Developing the
Reflective Function. Traumatic Memory Processes and Dissociation. PART V:
Problem Formulation for the Integrative Psychotherapist. Drawing on a Range
of Concepts for Problem Formulation. Relational Perspectives on Problem
Formulation. Diagnosis and the DSM-IV-TR: Pros and Cons. Anxiety and
Depression: Common Presenting Issues. From Personality Style to Personality
Disorder. Developmental Perspectives in Problem Formulation. Existential
Life Issues in Problem Formulation. Chronic Relational Trauma and Single
Traumatic Events. Complex Post -Traumatic Stress Disorder. Constructing an
Integrative Problem Formulation. PART VI: The Process of Integrative
Psychotherapy. The First Session: Important Considerations. What Therapy
for Which Client in What Context? Psychotherapeutic Change: The Role of
Love and Hope. Assessment in Psychotherapy. Therapeutic Relationship
Dimensions: An Overview. The Working Alliance and Effective Therapy. The
Person-to-Person or 'Real' Relationship. Transference and
Countertransference. The Reparative or Developmentally Needed Relationship.
The Transpersonal Relationship. The Representational Relationship.
Different Views on Working with the Transference. Repetitive and Selfobject
Dimensions of the Transference . Implicit and Explicit Levels of
Relationship. The Co-Created Unconscious or 'Analytic Third'. Reciprocal
Mutual Influence: A Two-Person Psychology . Conceptions of Time in
Integrative Psychotherapy. Inclusion: A Process Goal of Therapy . An
Integrative Approach to Trauma. Therapeutic Alliance Ruptures: Research and
Clinical Perspectives. The Integrative Psychotherapist as Researcher.
Developing One's Own Unique Style of Integration. PART VII: Techniques and
Strategies for the Integrative Psychotherapist. Implicit Relational
Knowing: Working with Self and Interactive Regulation. Working with
Unconscious Process and Unformulated Experience. Empathic Enquiry and
Empathic Resonance: Recognition Precedes Interpretation. Empathic
Attunement. Sexuality, Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation. Body
Awareness Techniques. An Overview of Therapeutic Interventions. Heightened
Affective Moments: Working with Improvisation and Spontaneity in
Psychotherapy. Working with Kohut's Self-Object dimensions of the
Transference. Working with The 'Script' as a Narrative Approach. Working
with Dissociation: Possible Strategies. Working with Shame and Shame-Based
Systems. Mindfulness Techniques. Inner Dialogue Between Different Self
States . Working with Symbolism and Metaphor. Working with Dreams. Working
with Erotic Transference. The Therapist's Use of the 'Self' in the
Therapeutic Process. Working with Countertransference. Self Disclosure in
Psychotherapy: Uses and Abuses. Addressing the Process of Rupture and
Repair. Working with Enactments and Therapeutic Impasse. Accepting and
Working with Mistakes. PART VIII: Ethics and Professional Practice. A
Process Stance on Ethics. Anti-Oppressive Practice. Professionalism in
Practice. The Wider Field of Psychotherapy. The Shadow Side of
Psychotherapy Organisations. Challenges for the Integrative
Psychotherapist. Reflections.