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Making sense of such bewildering problems as hallucinations, paranoia, depression, and anxiety seems as incredible challenge, but modern psychiatry is able to bring understanding and change to many of those whose lives are impaired by psychiatric problems. This is not accomplished through the application of one dominant psychological theory, but through the integration of perspectives of many such theories in this diverse field into a befitting approach-the biopsychosocial model. Application of the biopsychosocial model will allow for understanding the patient in biological, psychological, and social terms simultaneously, and provide a holistic picture with multiple strategies for treatment. In this book, the author takes a step back from the assessment to demonstrate to the student methods of the information gathered from the patient into a clinically useful whole, essentially showing exactly how and why the psychiatrist arrives at an intervention.
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This masterful, richly illustrated account of the planning and
building of the most important and influential early American
railroad, the Baltimore and Ohio, is an essential contribution not
only to railyway history but also to the broader history of the
development of the United States in the first half of the
nineteenth century. There was no precedent for the building of the
B&O. The construction of the 380-mile line from Baltimore to
the Ohio River over a period of 25 years is an epic story of astute
planning and innovative engineering that overcame many formidable
obstacles, notably the arduous traversing of 200 miles of mountain
wilderness. Its successful inauguration provided a spur to internal
improvements throughout the United States. Railroads, and certainly
the B&O, epitomized progress, not only in the development and
extension of the Western frontier but in the revelation that
personal travel and the delivery of freight could be dramatically
faster, better, and cheaper. The railroad deeply affected the
development of Baltimore's port, industry, and urban geography, as
well as its financial, educational, and cultural institutions.
George Peabody, Enoch Pratt, William Walters, and Johns Hopkins-the
city's most prominent philanthropists-were involved with the
B&O, some intimately; the Johns Hopkins University was founded
on B&O Railroad stock. The B&O also contributed by aiding
in the growth of the state's iron and coal industries. The B&O
came to be called "the Railroad University of the United States."
Its civil engineers formed the core of the railroad engineering
profession in America. The company's annual reports during the
building of the line were, according to the American Railroad
Journal in 1835, "a textbook and their road and workshops have been
as a lecture room to thousands." Throughout, the author highlights
the many types of men who were involved in that history: promoters,
financiers, politicians, lawyers, newspaper editors, fixers and
bagmen, civil engineers, inventors and mechanics, foremen,
contractors, and feuding Irish laborers, who together built the
first long-distance, general-purpose railroad in the United States.
The book is illustrated with 80 photographs and drawings and 5
maps.
Contents: Dilts, Series Introduction. McCance-Katz, Clark, Book Introduction. Larimer, Palmer, Marlatt, Relapse Prevention: An Overview of Marlatt's Cognitive-behavioral Model. Noonan, Moyers, Motivational Interviewing. Carroll, Libby, Sheehan, Hyland, Motivational Interviewing to Enhance Treatment Initiation in Substance Abusers: An Effectiveness Study. Gallanter, Dermatis, Keller, Trujillo, Network Therapy for Cocaine Abuse: Use of Family and Peer Support. Miller, Meyers, Hiller-Sturmhofel, The Community Reinforcement Approach. Higgins, Alessi, Dantona, Voucher-based Incentives: A Substance Abuse Treatment Innovation. Rawson, Huber, McCann, Shoptaw, Farabee, Reiber, Ling, A Comparison of Contingency Management and Cognitive-behavior Approaches during Methadone Maintenance Treatment for Cocaine Dependence. Westermeyer, Myott, Aarts, Thuras, Self-help Strategies among Patients with Substance Abuse Disorders. Kasprow, Rosenheck, Frisman, DeLella, Residential Treatment for Dually Diagnosed Homeless Veterans: A Comparison of Program Types. Kaminer, Burleson, Psychotherpies for Adolescent Substance Abusers: 15-Month Follow-up of a Pilot Study. Martin, The Links between Alcohol, Crime and the Criminal Justice System: Explanations, Evidence, and Interventions.
The editors of this volume have assembled recent articles
discussing elements of each of the several commonly used
psychosocial interventions -- including relapse prevention therapy,
community reinforcement, voucher-based programs, self-help
therapies, and motivational enhancement therapy--in addition to
research-based articles that demonstrate the efficacy of these
approaches. The selections in this book will provide the reader
with a broad overview of the field as well as the specific
information needed to use these therapies in a variety of clinical
settings.
Making sense of such bewildering problems as hallucinations,
paranoia, depression, and anxiety seems an incredible challenge,
but modern psychiatry is able to bring understanding and change to
many of those whose lives are impaired by psychiatric problems.
This is not accomplished through the application of one dominant
psychological theory, but through the integration of perspectives
of many such theories in this diverse field into a befitting
approach-the biopsychosocial model. Application of the
biopsychosocial model will allow for understanding the patient in
biological, psychological, and social terms simultaneously, and
provide a holistic picture with multiple strategies for treatment.
In this book, the author takes a step back from the assessment to
demonstrate to the student methods of the information gathered from
the patient into a clinically useful whole, essentially showing
exactly how and why the psychiatrist arrives at an intervention.
Baltimore was an innovator in the development of cast-iron
architecture, but the city's heritage of buildings in this genre,
once numbering over a hundred, has dwindled to only a handful
today. The Baltimore region has also had a long tradition in iron
production, beginning with the colonial era and continuing through
the 1950s as Sparrows Point became the single largest steel complex
in the world.
Baltimore's Cast-Iron Buildings, back in print after an absence
of several years, is a celebration of a unique aspect of
Baltimore's architectural and industrial history. The authors
examine cast-iron buildings in an integrated way to show how the
material was fabricated and the buildings erected. They also
explore the cast and wrought ironwork used for gates, fences,
railings, and ornaments. The heavily illustrated work includes
ironwork catalogs from the mid-1800s.
"This is a way of putting my life out there, because if I were to
write a memoir, there'd be five volumes before I got to The
Beatles. So I'm going at it this way, through photographs and
quotes. And this is, I feel, a better way for me to do it." - Ringo
Starr "Ringo's picture book, Ringo in book form. The essence of
Ringo." - David Lynch Another Day In The Life is introduced and
narrated by Ringo Starr, with forewords by legendary movie director
David Lynch and rock photographer Henry Diltz. Ringo shows us the
world as seen through a Starr's eyes, in more than 500
observational photographs and rare images from the archives, and an
original text of nearly 13,000 words. From Los Angeles to Tokyo and
everywhere in between, Ringo's photographs celebrate his life in
music and offer a glimpse behind the scenes. Many are taken during
historic events, such as Ringo's acceptance of a Grammy Lifetime
Achievement Award and his return to New York's Plaza Hotel, 50
years after The Beatles first visited the USA. Another Day In The
Life, Ringo Starr's 184-page monograph featuring Paul McCartney,
Joe Walsh and a host of All-Starr friends, is captioned throughout
with an original commentary. Meditative, witty and always engaging,
Ringo reflects on a legendary life in music. RINGOBOOK.COM
GENESIS-PUBLICATIONS.COM
Karen Falconer is the CEO and driving force of ANLP International
CIC, the world's most successful independent Association for NLP
Professionals. ANLP runs the largest international NLP annual
conference. Karen brings her vast experience of running successful
companies, working with SME businesses as a Management Accountant
and her skills as a certified NLP Trainer together to create this
book. It gives easy-to-follow, practical advice on how to start,
run and grow an efficient, professional NLP-led business. Karen
first coined the phrase "NLP Professional" in 2010 and it has since
become widely used, inside and outside of the NLP community, to
describe those in the NLP field who deliver their services
according to the ANLP code of ethics that she wrote and the
presuppositions of NLP. Karen has found that many people get into
NLP businesses to give back what they received from NLP in the
first place...and find it challenging to get financial rewards for
their services. In the NLP Professional, Karen shows that you can
have a positive impact delivering NLP and run a successful
professional, efficient and ethical business.
This book is an interdisciplinary collection of essays on Le Groupe
d'information sur les prisons (The Prisons Information Group, or
GIP). The GIP was a radical activist group, extant between 1970 and
1973, in which Michel Foucault was heavily involved. It aimed to
facilitate the circulation of information about living conditions
in French prisons and, over time, it catalyzed several revolts and
instigated minor reforms. In Foucault's words, the GIP sought to
identify what was 'intolerable' about the prison system and then to
produce 'an active intolerance' of that same intolerable reality.
To do this, the GIP 'gave prisoners the floor,' so as to hear from
them about what to resist and how. The essays collected here
explore the GIP's resources both for Foucault studies and for
prison activism today.
In celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Woodstock, this brand-new
photo book goes behind the scenes of the hit documentary film
Woodstock Where were you in the summer of '69? During these
tumultuous times, the war was raging; Ali had been stripped of his
crown; and in an obscure patch of earth in upstate New York, an
event called Woodstock would change the world. This unique book is
a collection of remembrances and perceptions from the filmmakers
who created, and for performers and festival producers who appeared
in, the Academy Award winning film, Woodstock. Featuring Janis
Joplin, David Crosby, The Who, Joan Baez, Merv Griffin, and many,
many, more
Die Bibliotheca Teubneriana, gegrundet 1849, ist die weltweit
alteste, traditionsreichste und umfangreichste Editionsreihe
griechischer und lateinischer Literatur von der Antike bis zur
Neuzeit. Pro Jahr erscheinen 4-5 neue Editionen. Samtliche Ausgaben
werden durch eine lateinische oder englische Praefatio erganzt. Die
wissenschaftliche Betreuung der Reihe obliegt einem Team
anerkannter Philologen: Gian Biagio Conte (Scuola Normale Superiore
di Pisa) Marcus Deufert (Universitat Leipzig) James Diggle
(University of Cambridge) Donald J. Mastronarde (University of
California, Berkeley) Franco Montanari (Universita di Genova)
Heinz-Gunther Nesselrath (Georg-August-Universitat Goettingen) Dirk
Obbink (University of Oxford) Oliver Primavesi (Ludwig-Maximilians
Universitat Munchen) Michael D. Reeve (University of Cambridge)
Richard J. Tarrant (Harvard University) Vergriffene Titel werden
als Print-on-Demand-Nachdrucke wieder verfugbar gemacht. Zudem
werden alle Neuerscheinungen der Bibliotheca Teubneriana parallel
zur gedruckten Ausgabe auch als eBook angeboten. Die alteren Bande
werden sukzessive ebenfalls als eBook bereitgestellt. Falls Sie
einen vergriffenen Titel bestellen moechten, der noch nicht als
Print-on-Demand angeboten wird, schreiben Sie uns an:
[email protected] Samtliche in der Bibliotheca
Teubneriana erschienenen Editionen lateinischer Texte sind in der
Datenbank BTL Online elektronisch verfugbar.
This masterful, richly illustrated account of the planning and
building of the most important and influential early American
railroad, the Baltimore and Ohio, is an essential contribution not
only to railyway history but also to the broader history of the
development of the United States in the first half of the
nineteenth century. There was no precedent for the building of the
B&O. The construction of the 380-mile line from Baltimore to
the Ohio River over a period of 25 years is an epic story of astute
planning and innovative engineering that overcame many formidable
obstacles, notably the arduous traversing of 200 miles of mountain
wilderness. Its successful inauguration provided a spur to internal
improvements throughout the United States. Railroads, and certainly
the B&O, epitomized progress, not only in the development and
extension of the Western frontier but in the revelation that
personal travel and the delivery of freight could be dramatically
faster, better, and cheaper. The railroad deeply affected the
development of Baltimore's port, industry, and urban geography, as
well as its financial, educational, and cultural institutions.
George Peabody, Enoch Pratt, William Walters, and Johns Hopkins-the
city's most prominent philanthropists-were involved with the
B&O, some intimately; the Johns Hopkins University was founded
on B&O Railroad stock. The B&O also contributed by aiding
in the growth of the state's iron and coal industries. The B&O
came to be called "the Railroad University of the United States."
Its civil engineers formed the core of the railroad engineering
profession in America. The company's annual reports during the
building of the line were, according to the American Railroad
Journal in 1835, "a textbook and their road and workshops have been
as a lecture room to thousands." Throughout, the author highlights
the many types of men who were involved in that history: promoters,
financiers, politicians, lawyers, newspaper editors, fixers and
bagmen, civil engineers, inventors and mechanics, foremen,
contractors, and feuding Irish laborers, who together built the
first long-distance, general-purpose railroad in the United States.
The book is illustrated with 80 photographs and drawings and 5
maps.
The Bibliotheca Teubneriana, established in 1849, has evolved into
the world's most venerable and extensive series of editions of
Greek and Latin literature, ranging from classical to Neo-Latin
texts. Some 4-5 new editions are published every year. A team of
renowned scholars in the field of Classical Philology acts as
advisory board: Gian Biagio Conte (Scuola Normale Superiore di
Pisa) Marcus Deufert (Universitat Leipzig) James Diggle (University
of Cambridge) Donald J. Mastronarde (University of California,
Berkeley) Franco Montanari (Universita di Genova) Heinz-Gunther
Nesselrath (Georg-August-Universitat Goettingen) Dirk Obbink
(University of Oxford) Oliver Primavesi (Ludwig-Maximilians
Universitat Munchen) Michael D. Reeve (University of Cambridge)
Richard J. Tarrant (Harvard University) Formerly out-of-print
editions are offered as print-on-demand reprints. Furthermore, all
new books in the Bibliotheca Teubneriana series are published as
eBooks. The older volumes of the series are being successively
digitized and made available as eBooks. If you are interested in
ordering an out-of-print edition, which hasn't been yet made
available as print-on-demand reprint, please contact us:
[email protected] All editions of Latin texts published in
the Bibliotheca Teubneriana are collected in the online database
BTL Online.
For those developing and teaching Counselor Education courses in
Clinical Mental Health Counseling and School Counseling programs,
this unique text will be a valuable resource. In it, experienced
instructors provide guidance based on their own breadth of
experiences, demonstrating how to design and implement an effective
curriculum. Chapters cover course topics such as theories of
counseling, multicultural counseling, legal and ethical issues,
psychopharmacology, and many more. Each chapter is organized in the
following sequence: an overview and objectives of the course,
including CACREP standards criteria for evaluating a text and
evaluations of the most popular texts used supplemental reading and
web sites learning activities counseling vignettes assignments and
a tentative course schedule concluding comments and advice from the
author(s). The authors also speak about the main points they want
their students to master and some of the dilemmas and challenges
they have faced in their own teaching. Both seasoned faculty
looking for ways to enrich a course and new educators teaching for
the first time will find this an indispensible resource for both
themselves and their departments.
At the start of the twenty-first century, 1 percent of the U.S.
population is behind bars. An additional 3 percent is on parole or
probation. In all but two states, incarcerated felons cannot vote,
and in three states felon disenfranchisement is for life. More than
5 million adult Americans cannot vote because of a felony-class
criminal conviction, meaning that more than 2 percent of otherwise
eligible voters are stripped of their political rights. Nationally,
fully a third of the disenfranchised are African American,
effectively disenfranchising 8 percent of all African Americans in
the United States. In Alabama, Kentucky, and Florida, one in every
five adult African Americans cannot vote.
Punishment and Inclusion gives a theoretical and historical account
of this pernicious practice of felon disenfranchisement, drawing
widely on early modern political philosophy, continental and
postcolonial political thought, critical race theory, feminist
philosophy, disability theory, critical legal studies, and archival
research into state constitutional conventions. It demonstrates
that the history of felon disenfranchisement, rooted in postslavery
restrictions on suffrage and the contemporaneous emergence of the
modern "American" penal system, reveals the deep connections
between two political institutions often thought to be separate,
showing the work of membership done by the criminal punishment
system and the work of punishment done by the electoral franchise.
Felon disenfranchisement is a symptom of the resolved tension that
persists in democratic politics between membership and punishment.
This book shows how this tension is managed via the persistence of
white supremacy in contemporary regimes of punishment and
governance.
Stephen Gilligan and Robert Dilts truly take you on a voyage of
self-discovery. The Hero's Journey examines the questions: How can
you live a meaningful life? What is the deepest life you are called
to, and how can you respond to that call? It is about how to
discover your calling and how to embark on the path of learning and
transformation that will reconnect you with your spirit, change
negative beliefs and habits, heal emotional wounds and physical
symptoms, deepen intimacy, and improve self-image and self-love.
Along this path we inevitably meet challenges and confronting these
challenges forces us to develop and think in new ways and push us
outside our comfort zone. The book takes the form of a transcript
of a four day workshop conducted by Stephen and Robert. It is a
powerful way of learning as you are so absorbed by the experiences
of the participants that you feel you are actually there. A
wonderful voyage of discovery for everyone who thinks 'there must
be more to life than this'. There is also a hardback edition
available, ISBN 9781845902865.
This book is an interdisciplinary collection of essays on Le Groupe
d'information sur les prisons (The Prisons Information Group, or
GIP). The GIP was a radical activist group, extant between 1970 and
1973, in which Michel Foucault was heavily involved. It aimed to
facilitate the circulation of information about living conditions
in French prisons and, over time, it catalyzed several revolts and
instigated minor reforms. In Foucault's words, the GIP sought to
identify what was 'intolerable' about the prison system and then to
produce 'an active intolerance' of that same intolerable reality.
To do this, the GIP 'gave prisoners the floor,' so as to hear from
them about what to resist and how. The essays collected here
explore the GIP's resources both for Foucault studies and for
prison activism today.
Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) teaches how to model excellence
to achieve excellence in everything you do. This introductory guide
explains the principles of NLP and how to use these principles in
your life - personally, spiritually and professionally. By focusing
on the fundamental presuppositions of NLP, this clear and concise
book gets right to its core. It explains key concepts such as
building rapport, modelling, anchoring and uncovering your
preferred learning style. It shows how to be in tune with your
patterns of behaviour and language and those of the people around
you, and how to use this knowledge to reach your goals. From
building confidence, to beating depression, to career development,
the uses of NLP are innumerable. This book is an ideal starting
point for anyone interested in learning the life-changing
techniques of NLP.
At the start of the twenty-first century, 1 percent of the U.S.
population is behind bars. An additional 3 percent is on parole or
probation. In all but two states, incarcerated felons cannot vote,
and in three states felon disenfranchisement is for life. More than
5 million adult Americans cannot vote because of a felony-class
criminal conviction, meaning that more than 2 percent of otherwise
eligible voters are stripped of their political rights. Nationally,
fully a third of the disenfranchised are African American,
effectively disenfranchising 8 percent of all African Americans in
the United States. In Alabama, Kentucky, and Florida, one in every
five adult African Americans cannot vote.
Punishment and Inclusion gives a theoretical and historical account
of this pernicious practice of felon disenfranchisement, drawing
widely on early modern political philosophy, continental and
postcolonial political thought, critical race theory, feminist
philosophy, disability theory, critical legal studies, and archival
research into state constitutional conventions. It demonstrates
that the history of felon disenfranchisement, rooted in postslavery
restrictions on suffrage and the contemporaneous emergence of the
modern "American" penal system, reveals the deep connections
between two political institutions often thought to be separate,
showing the work of membership done by the criminal punishment
system and the work of punishment done by the electoral franchise.
Felon disenfranchisement is a symptom of the resolved tension that
persists in democratic politics between membership and punishment.
This book shows how this tension is managed via the persistence of
white supremacy in contemporary regimes of punishment and
governance.
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