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Contemporary Clinical Practice: The Holding Environment Under
Assault is devoted to the examination of contemporary social
problems and their impact on the clinical process. State-of-the-art
psychodynamic theories will be applied to the understanding of how
war, terrorism, politics, government regulations, and other
environmental problems influence interactions between clinicians
and their patients.
International Perspectives on Social Work and Political Conflict
provides an important basis for readers to recognise and understand
the unique and specialist role that social workers have played and
continue to play in international contexts of political conflict.
Social workers make an important contribution in these difficult
and sometimes dangerous situations across all continents. This book
highlights the importance of social work in these very challenging
contexts. The first part of this book includes four chapters that
summarise the existing knowledge base. The second part focuses on a
case study of Northern Ireland where, for the first time, a
detailed examination of the social work role was completed which
involved researching the views of social work practitioners,
managers and educators. Part three then draws together
international experts in the field who have written chapters on
those regions where social workers have been dealing with long
standing periods of political conflict. At a time when violent
conflagrations are currently a feature of many countries and
regions across the continents of the world, this book offers a
critical view of the social work role in these contexts and should
thus be considered essential reading for all social work academics,
students and professionals working in conflict-affected societies.
International Perspectives on Social Work and Political Conflict
provides an important basis for readers to recognise and understand
the unique and specialist role that social workers have played and
continue to play in international contexts of political conflict.
Social workers make an important contribution in these difficult
and sometimes dangerous situations across all continents. This book
highlights the importance of social work in these very challenging
contexts. The first part of this book includes four chapters that
summarise the existing knowledge base. The second part focuses on a
case study of Northern Ireland where, for the first time, a
detailed examination of the social work role was completed which
involved researching the views of social work practitioners,
managers and educators. Part three then draws together
international experts in the field who have written chapters on
those regions where social workers have been dealing with long
standing periods of political conflict. At a time when violent
conflagrations are currently a feature of many countries and
regions across the continents of the world, this book offers a
critical view of the social work role in these contexts and should
thus be considered essential reading for all social work academics,
students and professionals working in conflict-affected societies.
Ongoing wars, a sinking economy, growing inequities-more than ever,
the outside world leaves a large footprint on patients' psyches.
Not surprisingly, therapists are experiencing increased tension
between sociopolitical realities, the inner world of the treatment
hour, and their own anxieties, training, and ethics. How does one
maintain trust and authenticity? Should the concept of therapeutic
neutrality still apply at a time of widespread societal trauma and
grief? The contributors to Contemporary Clinical Practice have
grappled with these and related questions, and offer stimulating
answers. Beginning with its subtitle, The Holding Environment under
Assault, the book gauges the extent to which modern life impinges
on the therapeutic relationship, and offers steps for clinicians to
reconcile these inner and outer worlds in practice and find healing
for themselves as well as their clients. Skillful analysis and
illustrative case examples bring modern perspective to existential
dilemmas common in therapy, from transference, countertransference,
and boundary difficulties to challenges posed by new technology.
Thought-inspiring topics include: * Integrating the interior and
exterior worlds of clinical social work. * Grief and loss in an age
of global trauma. * Virtual intimacy: help or hindrance? *
Considerations for psychoanalytic treatment in time of war. * What
happens to confidentiality when the government enters the treatment
room? * The loss of dissidence in psychoanalysis. An owner's manual
to 21st-century therapy, Contemporary Clinical Practice: The
Holding Environment under Assault will be hailed by social work
professionals, counselors, and policymakers as provocative,
sobering, and ultimately career-affirming.
This contributed volume reflects on the collective wisdom and
ongoing efforts of the social work profession that has been in the
forefront of the global pandemic of COVID-19. The contributors are
seasoned social work academics, practitioners, administrators, and
researchers. Working on the frontlines with patients and families,
these social workers have garnered experiences and insights, and
also have developed innovative ways to mitigate the impact of the
coronavirus on the psychosocial well-being of their clients and
themselves. The 36 reflections, experiences, and insights in this
curated collection address the behavioral, mental health,
socioeconomic, and other repercussions of the coronavirus pandemic
that have impacted their client base, most of whom are vulnerable
populations: Repurposed, Reassigned, Redeployed Safety Planning
with Survivors of Domestic Violence: How COVID-19 Shifts the Focus
COVID-19 and Moral Distress/Moral Anguish Therapeutic Support for
Healthcare Workers in Acute Care: Our Voice Shared Trauma and Harm
Reduction in the Time of COVID-19 Wholeheartedness in the Treatment
of Shared Trauma: Special Considerations During the COVID-19
Pandemic The Role of Ecosocial Work During the COVID-19 Pandemic:
The Natural World Black Lives, Mass Incarceration, and the
Perpetuity of Trauma in the Era of COVID-19: The Road to Abolition
Social Work Teaching Social Work Practice in the Shared Trauma of a
Global Pandemic The COVID-19 Self-Care Survival Guide: A Framework
for Clinicians to Categorize and Utilize Self-Care Strategies and
Practices Shared Trauma, Shared Resilience During a Pandemic:
Social Work in the Time of COVID-19 is an early and essential work
on the impact of the pandemic on the social work field with useful
practice wisdom for a broad audience. It can be assigned in
masters-level social work practice and elective courses on trauma,
as well as inform both neophyte and experienced practitioners. It
also would appeal to the general public interested in the work of
social workers during a pandemic.
This contributed volume reflects on the collective wisdom and
ongoing efforts of the social work profession that has been in the
forefront of the global pandemic of COVID-19. The contributors are
seasoned social work academics, practitioners, administrators, and
researchers. Working on the frontlines with patients and families,
these social workers have garnered experiences and insights, and
also have developed innovative ways to mitigate the impact of the
coronavirus on the psychosocial well-being of their clients and
themselves. The 36 reflections, experiences, and insights in this
curated collection address the behavioral, mental health,
socioeconomic, and other repercussions of the coronavirus pandemic
that have impacted their client base, most of whom are vulnerable
populations: Repurposed, Reassigned, Redeployed Safety Planning
with Survivors of Domestic Violence: How COVID-19 Shifts the Focus
COVID-19 and Moral Distress/Moral Anguish Therapeutic Support for
Healthcare Workers in Acute Care: Our Voice Shared Trauma and Harm
Reduction in the Time of COVID-19 Wholeheartedness in the Treatment
of Shared Trauma: Special Considerations During the COVID-19
Pandemic The Role of Ecosocial Work During the COVID-19 Pandemic:
The Natural World Black Lives, Mass Incarceration, and the
Perpetuity of Trauma in the Era of COVID-19: The Road to Abolition
Social Work Teaching Social Work Practice in the Shared Trauma of a
Global Pandemic The COVID-19 Self-Care Survival Guide: A Framework
for Clinicians to Categorize and Utilize Self-Care Strategies and
Practices Shared Trauma, Shared Resilience During a Pandemic:
Social Work in the Time of COVID-19 is an early and essential work
on the impact of the pandemic on the social work field with useful
practice wisdom for a broad audience. It can be assigned in
masters-level social work practice and elective courses on trauma,
as well as inform both neophyte and experienced practitioners. It
also would appeal to the general public interested in the work of
social workers during a pandemic.
This book focuses on the most basic of human interactions _ love
and attachment in all of their permutations and the barriers that
exist to achieving closeness. The specific topics addressed include
gender, class, race, and ethnicity. All these demonstrate the
complexity of relationships in contemporary life. This work
reflects the growing body of knowledge of developmental theory and
attachment research. The rich confluence of psychodynamic
understanding and attachment studies is synthesized with techniques
for working with specific populations. Collectively, the authors
present a comprehensive understanding of love in all of its current
configurations: internal and interpersonal problems in adult life,
dysfunctional attachments, and intimacy in the treatment
relationship. It will help therapists hone their clinical skills to
promote their clinical skills to promote their clients' growth,
love, and attachment.
Confronting the challenge to provide sound clinical treatment in
brief therapy, this timely book will enrich the practices of all
psychotherapists. Designed and arranged according to the DSM-IV
diagnostic categories, each chapter addresses the short-term
treatment of a specific condition or patient population. Starting
from the premise that psychodynamically trained clinicians already
possess the requisite skills to conduct short-term treatment, the
editors demonstrate how to adapt these skills to a time-limited
approach.
Confronting the challenge to provide sound clinical treatment in
brief therapy, this timely book will enrich the practices of all
psychotherapists. Designed and arranged according to the DSM-IV
diagnostic categories, each chapter addresses the short-term
treatment of a specific condition or patient population. Starting
from the premise that psychodynamically trained clinicians already
possess the requisite skills to conduct short-term treatment, the
editors demonstrate how to adapt these skills to a time-limited
approach.
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