Stephen Palmer is Joint award winner of the Annual Counselling Psychology Award for outstanding professional and scientific contribution to Counselling Psychology in Britain for 2000.
`The editors′ support for the integrative project is clear, but the book will hold its own with the sceptics too. I recommend it′ – Counselling at Work
This innovative and timely book examines the issues and ideas surrounding integration and eclecticism in a therapeutic context, and provides a detailed account of a wide range of approaches in use.
Following an exploration of the origins of integrative and eclectic processes, 10 approaches are explained in detail. Chapters on each approach: describe its central concepts, assumptions and therapeutic goals; outline its view of how psychological disturbance is acquired, perpetuated and resolved; examine how the theory relates to practice – including examples of typical sessions and case studies; and consider which clients might benefit.
Further chapters explore the implications of using integrative and eclectic approaches for training, supervision, for working in a time-limited context and from a multicultural perspective.
Table des matières
Preface
PART ONE: INTRODUCTION
Eclecticism/Integration – Henry Hollanders
Historical Developments
Eclecticism/Integration – Henry Hollanders
Some Key Issues and Research
PART TWO: THERAPEUTIC APPROACHES
The Conversational Model – Jane Martin and Frank Margison
Integrating Systemic Thinking in Counselling and Psychotherapy – David Bott
A Systematic Integrative Relational Model for Counselling and Psychotherapy – Katherine Murphy and Maria Gilbert
A Relational Approach to Therapy – Stephen Paul and Geoff Pelham
Integrated Eclecticism – Clare Austen
A Therapeutic Synthesis
Multimodal Therapy – Stephen Palmer
Gerard Egan′s Skilled Helper Model – Peter Jenkins
Problem Focused Counselling and Psychotherapy – Stephen Palmer and Michael Neenan
Cognitive-Analytical Therapy – David Crossley and Mark Stowell-Smith
Eclecticism and Integration in Humanistic Therapy – William West
PART THREE: ISSUES
Multi-Cultural Issues in Eclectic and Integrative Counselling and Psychotherapy – Colin Lago and Roy Moodley
Integration and Eclecticism in Brief/Time-Focused Therapy – Jenifer Elton Wilson
Integration and Eclecticism in Supervision – Val Wosket
Integration and Eclecticism in Counselling Training – Mary Connor
Eclectic, Integrative and Integrating Psychotherapy or Beyond Schoolism – Petruska Clarkson
Principles and Practice of a Personal Integration – Ian Horton
The Personal, the Professional and the Basis of Integrative Practice – Rhona Fear and Ray Woolfe
A propos de l’auteur
Ray Woolfe is a Counselling Psychologist in private practice.