Psychodynamic Perspectives on Abuse
The Cost of Fear
Herausgeber: Hooper, Carol-Ann; McCluskey, Una
Psychodynamic Perspectives on Abuse
The Cost of Fear
Herausgeber: Hooper, Carol-Ann; McCluskey, Una
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Psychodynamic Perspectives on Abuse brings together psychoanalytic psychotherapists, political theorists, organisational consultants, social workers and social policy academics to explore the nature and ramifications of abuse in a new light. Psychodynamic Perspectives on Abuse is unique in its range and focus.
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Psychodynamic Perspectives on Abuse brings together psychoanalytic psychotherapists, political theorists, organisational consultants, social workers and social policy academics to explore the nature and ramifications of abuse in a new light. Psychodynamic Perspectives on Abuse is unique in its range and focus.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Juni 2000
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 232mm x 161mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 481g
- ISBN-13: 9781853026867
- ISBN-10: 1853026867
- Artikelnr.: 21272042
- Verlag: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Juni 2000
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 232mm x 161mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 481g
- ISBN-13: 9781853026867
- ISBN-10: 1853026867
- Artikelnr.: 21272042
Edited by Una McCluskey and Carol-Ann Hooper
Introduction: Abuse
the individual and the social
Carol-Ann Hooper and Una McCluskey. SECTION ONE: THE INDVIDUAL AND INTERPERSONAL CONTEXTS OF ABUSE. 1. An object-relations perspective on the development of the person
Jeremy Hazell
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist
Cardiff. 2. Attachment theory and abuse: A developmental perspective
Jeremy Holmes
North Devon District Hospital. 3. Relationships as a function of context
Frances B. Carter. 4. Is human nature intrinsically abusive? Reflections on the psychodynamics of evil
Phil Mollon
North Herts NHS Trust. SECTION TWO: THE SOCIAL
CULTURAL AND POLITICAL CONTEXTS OF ABUSE. 5. Exile: Paradoxes of loss and creativity
Nancy Caro Hollander. 6. Abuse in religious institutions: An exploration of the psychosocial dynamics in the Irish context
Una McCluskey. 7. What cost assimilation and integration? Working with transcultural issues
Lennox Thomas. 8. Intimacy
gender and abuse: The construction of masculinities
Stephen Frosh
Birkbeck College. 9. Sexual orientation and abuse
Francis Mondimore
University of North Carolina. SECTION THREE: WORKING WITH INDIVIDUALS IN CLINICAL SETTINGS. 10. Inner silence: One of the impacts of emotional abuse upon the developing self
Susan Vas Dias
Centre for Attachment-Based Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
London. 11. Treatment or torture? Working with issues of abuse and torture in the transference
Shirley Truckle
Birmingham Trust for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. 12. The abuse of learning disabled people: Living and working with the consequences
Valerie Sinason
Tavistock Clinic. 13. Dissociative identity disorder and memories of childhood abuse
Phil Mollon. SECTION FOUR: WORKING WITH INDIVIDUALS AND GROUPS IN ORGANISATIONAL SETTINGS. 14. Containment
supervision and abuse
Dick Agass. 15. Working as an organisational consultant with abuse encountered in the workplace
Judith Brearley
Organisational Consultant and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist in private practice
Edinburgh. SECTION FIVE: PSYCHODYNAMIC RELFECTIONS ON SOCIAL POLICY. 16. Desire and the law
Andrew Cooper
Tavistock Clinic. 17. Social work responses to domestic violence in the context of child protection
Margaret Bell
University of York. 18. Reparative experience or repeated trauma? Child sexual abuse and adult mental health services
Carol-Ann Hooper and Juliet Koprowska. 19. The repudiated self: The failure of social welfare policy for older people
Joan Harbison
Dalhousie University
Canada. Index.
the individual and the social
Carol-Ann Hooper and Una McCluskey. SECTION ONE: THE INDVIDUAL AND INTERPERSONAL CONTEXTS OF ABUSE. 1. An object-relations perspective on the development of the person
Jeremy Hazell
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist
Cardiff. 2. Attachment theory and abuse: A developmental perspective
Jeremy Holmes
North Devon District Hospital. 3. Relationships as a function of context
Frances B. Carter. 4. Is human nature intrinsically abusive? Reflections on the psychodynamics of evil
Phil Mollon
North Herts NHS Trust. SECTION TWO: THE SOCIAL
CULTURAL AND POLITICAL CONTEXTS OF ABUSE. 5. Exile: Paradoxes of loss and creativity
Nancy Caro Hollander. 6. Abuse in religious institutions: An exploration of the psychosocial dynamics in the Irish context
Una McCluskey. 7. What cost assimilation and integration? Working with transcultural issues
Lennox Thomas. 8. Intimacy
gender and abuse: The construction of masculinities
Stephen Frosh
Birkbeck College. 9. Sexual orientation and abuse
Francis Mondimore
University of North Carolina. SECTION THREE: WORKING WITH INDIVIDUALS IN CLINICAL SETTINGS. 10. Inner silence: One of the impacts of emotional abuse upon the developing self
Susan Vas Dias
Centre for Attachment-Based Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
London. 11. Treatment or torture? Working with issues of abuse and torture in the transference
Shirley Truckle
Birmingham Trust for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. 12. The abuse of learning disabled people: Living and working with the consequences
Valerie Sinason
Tavistock Clinic. 13. Dissociative identity disorder and memories of childhood abuse
Phil Mollon. SECTION FOUR: WORKING WITH INDIVIDUALS AND GROUPS IN ORGANISATIONAL SETTINGS. 14. Containment
supervision and abuse
Dick Agass. 15. Working as an organisational consultant with abuse encountered in the workplace
Judith Brearley
Organisational Consultant and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist in private practice
Edinburgh. SECTION FIVE: PSYCHODYNAMIC RELFECTIONS ON SOCIAL POLICY. 16. Desire and the law
Andrew Cooper
Tavistock Clinic. 17. Social work responses to domestic violence in the context of child protection
Margaret Bell
University of York. 18. Reparative experience or repeated trauma? Child sexual abuse and adult mental health services
Carol-Ann Hooper and Juliet Koprowska. 19. The repudiated self: The failure of social welfare policy for older people
Joan Harbison
Dalhousie University
Canada. Index.
Introduction: Abuse
the individual and the social
Carol-Ann Hooper and Una McCluskey. SECTION ONE: THE INDVIDUAL AND INTERPERSONAL CONTEXTS OF ABUSE. 1. An object-relations perspective on the development of the person
Jeremy Hazell
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist
Cardiff. 2. Attachment theory and abuse: A developmental perspective
Jeremy Holmes
North Devon District Hospital. 3. Relationships as a function of context
Frances B. Carter. 4. Is human nature intrinsically abusive? Reflections on the psychodynamics of evil
Phil Mollon
North Herts NHS Trust. SECTION TWO: THE SOCIAL
CULTURAL AND POLITICAL CONTEXTS OF ABUSE. 5. Exile: Paradoxes of loss and creativity
Nancy Caro Hollander. 6. Abuse in religious institutions: An exploration of the psychosocial dynamics in the Irish context
Una McCluskey. 7. What cost assimilation and integration? Working with transcultural issues
Lennox Thomas. 8. Intimacy
gender and abuse: The construction of masculinities
Stephen Frosh
Birkbeck College. 9. Sexual orientation and abuse
Francis Mondimore
University of North Carolina. SECTION THREE: WORKING WITH INDIVIDUALS IN CLINICAL SETTINGS. 10. Inner silence: One of the impacts of emotional abuse upon the developing self
Susan Vas Dias
Centre for Attachment-Based Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
London. 11. Treatment or torture? Working with issues of abuse and torture in the transference
Shirley Truckle
Birmingham Trust for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. 12. The abuse of learning disabled people: Living and working with the consequences
Valerie Sinason
Tavistock Clinic. 13. Dissociative identity disorder and memories of childhood abuse
Phil Mollon. SECTION FOUR: WORKING WITH INDIVIDUALS AND GROUPS IN ORGANISATIONAL SETTINGS. 14. Containment
supervision and abuse
Dick Agass. 15. Working as an organisational consultant with abuse encountered in the workplace
Judith Brearley
Organisational Consultant and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist in private practice
Edinburgh. SECTION FIVE: PSYCHODYNAMIC RELFECTIONS ON SOCIAL POLICY. 16. Desire and the law
Andrew Cooper
Tavistock Clinic. 17. Social work responses to domestic violence in the context of child protection
Margaret Bell
University of York. 18. Reparative experience or repeated trauma? Child sexual abuse and adult mental health services
Carol-Ann Hooper and Juliet Koprowska. 19. The repudiated self: The failure of social welfare policy for older people
Joan Harbison
Dalhousie University
Canada. Index.
the individual and the social
Carol-Ann Hooper and Una McCluskey. SECTION ONE: THE INDVIDUAL AND INTERPERSONAL CONTEXTS OF ABUSE. 1. An object-relations perspective on the development of the person
Jeremy Hazell
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist
Cardiff. 2. Attachment theory and abuse: A developmental perspective
Jeremy Holmes
North Devon District Hospital. 3. Relationships as a function of context
Frances B. Carter. 4. Is human nature intrinsically abusive? Reflections on the psychodynamics of evil
Phil Mollon
North Herts NHS Trust. SECTION TWO: THE SOCIAL
CULTURAL AND POLITICAL CONTEXTS OF ABUSE. 5. Exile: Paradoxes of loss and creativity
Nancy Caro Hollander. 6. Abuse in religious institutions: An exploration of the psychosocial dynamics in the Irish context
Una McCluskey. 7. What cost assimilation and integration? Working with transcultural issues
Lennox Thomas. 8. Intimacy
gender and abuse: The construction of masculinities
Stephen Frosh
Birkbeck College. 9. Sexual orientation and abuse
Francis Mondimore
University of North Carolina. SECTION THREE: WORKING WITH INDIVIDUALS IN CLINICAL SETTINGS. 10. Inner silence: One of the impacts of emotional abuse upon the developing self
Susan Vas Dias
Centre for Attachment-Based Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
London. 11. Treatment or torture? Working with issues of abuse and torture in the transference
Shirley Truckle
Birmingham Trust for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. 12. The abuse of learning disabled people: Living and working with the consequences
Valerie Sinason
Tavistock Clinic. 13. Dissociative identity disorder and memories of childhood abuse
Phil Mollon. SECTION FOUR: WORKING WITH INDIVIDUALS AND GROUPS IN ORGANISATIONAL SETTINGS. 14. Containment
supervision and abuse
Dick Agass. 15. Working as an organisational consultant with abuse encountered in the workplace
Judith Brearley
Organisational Consultant and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist in private practice
Edinburgh. SECTION FIVE: PSYCHODYNAMIC RELFECTIONS ON SOCIAL POLICY. 16. Desire and the law
Andrew Cooper
Tavistock Clinic. 17. Social work responses to domestic violence in the context of child protection
Margaret Bell
University of York. 18. Reparative experience or repeated trauma? Child sexual abuse and adult mental health services
Carol-Ann Hooper and Juliet Koprowska. 19. The repudiated self: The failure of social welfare policy for older people
Joan Harbison
Dalhousie University
Canada. Index.