|
|
Showing 1 - 25 of
76 matches in All Departments
|
True Creature (Hardcover)
Steve Zell; Edited by Leigh Anne Beresford; Contributions by Steven Joseph Pitzel
|
R692
R621
Discovery Miles 6 210
Save R71 (10%)
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
In the mid-1940s, once the full impact of World War II was
assessed, the world witnessed major legal developments in both
modern trade and human rights. Since then, volumes have been
written about modern trade law, and human rights law has seen an
equal amount of attention. While these topics constitute two of the
most active spheres in international law, follow similar
intellectual trajectories, and often feature the same key actors
and arenas, neither field has actively engaged with the other. They
co-exist in relative isolation at best, peppered by occasional
hostile debates. It has come to be a given that pro-trade laws are
not good for human rights, and legislation that protects human
rights hampers vibrant international trade.
In a bold departure from this canon, Just Trade makes a case for
reaching a middle-ground between these two fields, acknowledging
their co-existence and the significant points at which they
overlap. Using actual examples from many of the 35 nations of the
Western Hemisphere, the authors one a human rights scholar and the
other specializing in trade law -- carefully combine their
expertise to examine human rights policies involving conscripted
child labor, sustainable development, promotion of health, equality
of women, human trafficking, indigenous peoples, poverty,
citizenship, and economic sanctions, never overlooking the very
real human rights problems that arise from international trade.
However, instead of viewing the two kinds of law as isolated,
polar, and sometimes hostile opposites, Berta Esperanza
HernAndez-Truyol and Stephen J. Powell make powerful suggestions
for how these intersections may be navigated to promote an
internationalmarketplace that embraces both liberal trade and
liberal protection of human rights.
Research shows that the therapeutic relationship can offer a
catalyst for healing, helping traumatized clients to make sense of
and re-build their lives. This book provides practitioners with
expert insight into supporting clients' recovery from trauma by
placing the therapeutic relationship at the heart of the
therapeutic process:
- It explores the role of the therapeutic relationship across a
wide range of theoretical perspectives, including humanistic,
psychodynamic and cognitive behavioural approaches.
- It brings together specialists from across the globe to provide
practitioners with the latest thinking about client-centred work
with trauma.
- It considers particular aspects of psychological trauma,
including posttraumatic stress and posttraumatic growth.
This is the first book to combine trauma recovery with the
therapeutic relationship. As such it is an important textbook for
everyone with an interest in trauma therapy, whether as an aspect
of training or of practice.
From Celibate Catholic Priest to Married Protestant Minister:
Shepherding in Greener Pastures describes a previously unstudied
population of celibate Catholic priests who left the priesthood and
eventually became married Protestant ministers. Stephen Fichter
alternates from narrative to descriptive as he follows the lives of
three of his study participants before, during, and after their
dual transition. The descriptive sections include a history of
religiously motivated celibacy and a review of the four leading
forerunners in the field of Catholic clergy research. This
scholarly study is the first time that these transitional clerics
have candidly explained their difficult journeys of discernment.
Religion, love, loss, and commitment are all analyzed in the
context of this unique group of men, and the profiles in this book
are memorable not only for the richness of their content, but
also-and maybe most importantly-for their humanity. Lessons can be
drawn for all people, especially those who have ever suffered a
mid-life crisis.
Since the Genocide against the Tutsi, when up to one million
Rwandan people were brutally killed, Rwanda has undergone a
remarkable period of reconstruction. Driven by a governmental
programme of unity and reconciliation, the last 25 years have seen
significant changes at national, community, and individual levels.
This book gathers previously unpublished testimonies from
individuals who lived through the genocide. These are the voices of
those who experienced one of the most horrific events of the 20th
Century. Yet, their stories do not simply paint a picture of lives
left destroyed and damaged; they also demonstrate healing
relationships, personal growth, forgiveness and reconciliation.
Through the lens of positive psychology, the book presents a range
of perspectives on what happened in Rwanda in 1994, and shows how
people have been changed by their experience of genocide.
Documents Annex: http://www.nyupress.org/justtradeannex/index.html
It is generally assumed that pro-trade laws are not good for human
rights, and legislation that protects human rights hampers vibrant
international trade. In a bold departure from this canon, Just
Trade makes a case for reaching a middleground between these two
fields, acknowledging their coexistence and the significant points
at which they overlap. Using actual examples from many of the
thirty-five nations of the Western Hemisphere, the authors-one a
human rights scholar and the other a trade law expert-carefully
combine their knowledge to examine human rights policies throughout
the world, never overlooking the very real human rights problems
that arise from international trade. However, instead of viewing
the two kinds of law as isolated, polar, and sometimes hostile
opposites, Berta Esperanza Hernandez-Truyol and Stephen J. Powell
make powerful suggestions for how these intersections may be
navigated to promote an international marketplace that embraces
both liberal trade and liberal protection of human rights.
Research has shown than anywhere from 30 to 90 per cent of people
confronted by tragedy, horror and adversity emerge as wiser, more
mature and more fulfilled people, sometimes despite great sadness.
Relationships become stronger. Perspectives on life change. Inner
strengths are found. For the past twenty years, Stephen Joseph has
worked with survivors of trauma and sufferers of posttraumatic
stress. In this groundbreaking book, he boldly challenges the
notion that trauma and its aftermath devastate and destroy the
lives. His studies have shown that a wide range of traumatic events
- from illness, separation, assault and bereavement to accidents,
natural disasters and terrorism - can act as catalysts for positive
change, strengthening relationships, changing one's perspective and
revealing inner strengths. In What Doesn't Kill Us, Stephen Joseph
shares the six steps we can all use to manage our emotions and
navigate adversity to find new meaning, purpose and direction in
our lives.
The hunger for authenticity guides us throughout our lives. People
strive for joined-up living, where on the one hand what they say
and do reflects what they think and feel, and on the other what
they think and feel reflects who they are. Stephen Joseph has
pioneered developments in research into authenticity, drawing on
the solid science of positive psychology to develop what has become
one of the gold-standard tests for assessing authenticity. His and
others' findings reveal that when people are in relationships in
which they feel accepted, understood and valued, they drop their
defences. They naturally begin to examine themselves
psychologically, accommodate new information and live more
authentically. What's more, the latest studies reveal that it is
authenticity that leads to true happiness. In Authentic, Stephen
Joseph presents his fresh and inspiring perspective on the
psychology of authenticity alongside practical advice and exercises
for the reader. Drawing on the wisdom of existential philosophers,
the insights and research of psychologists, and case studies from
his own and others' clinical experiences, he shows how authenticity
is the foundation of human flourishing - as well as how the ideas
relate to debates about the importance of happiness.
The applications of positive psychology are different from
traditional interventions in therapy in that they are focused on
building strength, resilience and well-being rather than being
restricted to simply treating disorder. Since the publication of
the first edition of Positive Therapy, there is now a comprehensive
body of applied positive psychology research to which practitioners
may turn in order to inform their own practice, and that sees its
purpose as the facilitation of human flourishing and optimal
functioning. However, much of this research and its implications
are only now becoming more widely understood in counselling and
psychotherapy. This new and expanded edition of Positive Therapy
shows how the latest thinking in positive psychology can be applied
to psychotherapeutic practice, and specifically to person-centred
therapy. Making the links between positive psychology and
psychotherapy explicit, Stephen Joseph describes the new tools that
practitioners can draw upon to help and facilitate positive
functioning in their clients. New material includes: An update of
the latest positive psychology research A new preface, explaining
how positive psychology principles can now be applied to
therapeutic practice Focus on positive psychology measurement tools
Positive Therapy will be essential reading for all
psychotherapists, counsellors, social workers, coaches,
psychologists and trainees interested in exploring how they engage
with clients, and the implications of this engagement in practice.
The applications of positive psychology are different from
traditional interventions in therapy in that they are focused on
building strength, resilience and well-being rather than being
restricted to simply treating disorder. Since the publication of
the first edition of Positive Therapy, there is now a comprehensive
body of applied positive psychology research to which practitioners
may turn in order to inform their own practice, and that sees its
purpose as the facilitation of human flourishing and optimal
functioning. However, much of this research and its implications
are only now becoming more widely understood in counselling and
psychotherapy. This new and expanded edition of Positive Therapy
shows how the latest thinking in positive psychology can be applied
to psychotherapeutic practice, and specifically to person-centred
therapy. Making the links between positive psychology and
psychotherapy explicit, Stephen Joseph describes the new tools that
practitioners can draw upon to help and facilitate positive
functioning in their clients. New material includes: An update of
the latest positive psychology research A new preface, explaining
how positive psychology principles can now be applied to
therapeutic practice Focus on positive psychology measurement tools
Positive Therapy will be essential reading for all
psychotherapists, counsellors, social workers, coaches,
psychologists and trainees interested in exploring how they engage
with clients, and the implications of this engagement in practice.
For the past twenty years, pioneering psychologist Stephen Joseph
has worked with survivors of trauma. His studies have yielded a
startling discovery: that a wide range of traumatic events--from
illness, divorce, separation, assault, and bereavement to
accidents, natural disasters, and terrorism--can act as catalysts
for positive change. Boldly challenging the conventional wisdom
about trauma and its aftermath, Joseph demonstrates that rather
than ruining one's life, a traumatic event can actually improve it.
Drawing on the wisdom of ancient philosophers, the insights of
evolutionary biologists, and the optimism of positive
psychologists, "What Doesn't Kill Us" reveals how all of us can
navigate change and adversity-- traumatic or otherwise--to find new
meaning, purpose, and direction in life.
Follow-up volume to the best-selling, critically acclaimed
"Person-Centred Psychopathology", "Person-Centred Practice: Case
Studies in Positive Psychology" takes forward the work of the
previous volume by rooting the theory of that volume in the
practice of internationally renowned practitioners and scholars.
The book demonstrates that person-centred theory has real depth in
its ability to address the distress of challenging client
groups.Case studies show how mature practitioners engage with a
range of issues in psychopathology: eating disorders, post-natal
and maternal distress, childhood sexual abuse, long-term depression
and its existential components, issues of spirituality, psychotic
functioning and loss of psychological contact. There is a focus on
the first-person voice of three clients and reflections on training
by a clinical psychologist. Two case studies look at the political
and social aspects of therapy. There is an analysis of a previously
unpublished interview with Gina by Carl Rogers, a paper on models
for understanding hallucinations, and a chapter on assessment
instruments which are congruent with person-centred practice.This
book builds bridges between counselling theory and practice, as
well as between person-centred therapy and the new and important
discipline of positive psychology.
Since the release of Doug Stephens' first book, The Retail Revival,
change in the global retail sector has accelerated beyond even the
boldest forecasts. As predicted, online giants like Amazon and
Alibaba.com are growing at a dizzying pace. Hundreds of well-known
brick and mortar retailers have closed their doors, and brands and
retailers across categories are struggling to understand the
shifting needs and expectations of a new consumer. Picking up where
The Retail Revival left off, Reengineering Retail explores the
coming revolution in the global retail and consumer goods market,
offering sales and marketing executives a roadmap to the future.
Author and internationally renowned consumer futurist, Doug
Stephens, paints a bold vision of the future where every aspect of
the retail experience as we know it, will be radically transformed.
From online to bricks and mortar, the very concept of what stores
are, how consumers shop them, and even the core economic model for
revenue, will be will be profoundly reinvented; changes sure to
affect not only retailers large and small but any business with a
stake in the global retail industry. Infused with real world
examples and interviews with industry disruptors, Reengineering
Retail illustrates the vast opportunities at play for bold brands
and business leaders. Stephens' strategies will provide businesses
with the foresight required to move quickly and effectively into
the future.
|
2nd Wave
Steven Joseph Mccrystal; Meek, Various
|
R289
Discovery Miles 2 890
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is an anxiety disorder that
can develop after exposure to one or more traumatic events. It is a
severe and ongoing emotional reaction to extreme psychological
trauma, such as threat to life, being a victim of crime or sexual
assault, witnessing someone's death, or a threat to one's physical
and/or psychological integrity. The new edition updated throughout,
presents information in a helpful, practical, and accessible way
that will be helpful to survivors, and their family and friends.
The book begins with a description of PTSD and other related
problems, often experienced by survivors, a short history of the
developments in the field, information on common responses to
trauma, theory, assessment, treatment and research findings.
Further chapters reflect new theoretical thinking and directions in
the field of trauma including post-traumatic growth following
adversity. New chapters to this edition address the impact of
traumatic bereavement, the needs of ex-hostages and their families,
and suggestions for self-help after trauma. Post-traumatic stress:
The Facts is essential reading for sufferers of post-traumatic
stress, their families and friends, and will also be of interest to
the general reader and a valuable resource for helping
professionals, such as general practitioners, psychologists, social
workers, mental health nurses, counsellors and those supporting
victims of trauma in the voluntary sector. The book will also be
helpful for those in the voluntary and statutory sector responsible
for providing crisis support to those affected by major traumatic
events in the community.
|
You may like...
The Stranded
Sarah Daniels
Paperback
R234
Discovery Miles 2 340
|