Counselling and Psychotherapy in Context What are counselling and psychotherapy? - Terry Hanley The social and political context of counselling and psychotherapy - Laura Anne Winter What do people come to counselling and psychotherapy for? - Terry Hanley What are the training routes in counselling and psychotherapy? - Laura Anne Winter and Terry Hanley Where do counsellors and psychotherapists work? - Laura Anne Winter and Terry Hanley Social justice and intersectionality Intersectionality, power & privilege - Dwight Turner Age - Leonie Sugarman Counselling and psychotherapy in the context of the climate and environmental crisis - Martin Milton Disability - Esther Ingham Gender - Sam Hope Neurodivergence - Lesley Dougan Religion and Spirituality - Cemil Egeli and William West Race, culture and ethnicity - what is your story? - Ohemaa Nkansa-Dwamena and Yetunde Ade-Serrano Social Class - Liz Ballinger Sexuality - Silva Neves and Dominic Davies Core therapeutic and professional skills Contracting and Therapeutic Beginnings - India Amos The Client-Therapist Relationship - William B. Stiles Assessment - Biljana Van Rijn Risk: Assessment, Exploration and Mitigation - Andrew Reeves Formulation - Lucy Johnstone Using Outcome and Process Measures - Julia Lyons Confidentiality, recordkeeping, and notetaking - Gabriel Wynn Working with Interpreters - Rachel Tribe and Claire Marshall Therapeutic Middles - India Amos Therapeutic Endings - India Amos Personal and Professional Development - Chris Rose Clinical Supervision - Mary Creaner Ethics in Practice - Linda Finlay Complaints: Learning, prevention, and procedures. - Clare Symons Therapy and the law - Peter Jenkins Mental health law - Sobhi Girgis Integrating Research and Practice - John McLeod Leadership: therapists as leaders - Daisy Best and Helen Nicholas Social media and professionalism - Julie Prescott and Chathurika Kannangara Knowledge of psychopharmacology - Anne Guy Critical thinking skills in counselling and psychotherapy - Colin Feltham What do people come to therapy for? Adult sexual violence: rape and sexual assault - Ishba Rehman Alcohol-related difficulties - Mani Mehdikani, Julie Scheiner & Loren Whyatt Anxiety and Panic - Steven Barnes, Julie Prescott, and Jerome Carson Bereavement and Loss - Edith Maria Steffen and Evgenia (Jane) Milman Chronic physical health problems - Soha Daru Counselling for drug-related problems - Tony White Depression - Denis O'Hara Eating disorders - Gabriel Wynn Hearing Voices - Joachim Schnackenberg Low self-esteem - Soha Daru Managing stress - Stephen Palmer and Rowan Bayne Obessive Compusive Disorder - Tracie Holroyd Personality disorders - Julia Lyons Phobias - Charlotte Conn, Aashiya Patel and Julie Prescott Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder - Divine Charura and Penn Smith Sex and Relationship Problems - Cate Campbell Sexual abuse in childhood - Rosaleen McElvaney Suicide and self-harm - Andrew Reeves Working with survivors of domestic violence - Christiane Sanderson Theories and approaches Acceptance and Commitment Therapy - John Boorman, Eric Morris and Joe Oliver Attachment-based psychoanalytic psychotherapy - Mark Linington and Victoria Settle Cognitive analytic therapy - Claire Pollitt Cognitive behavioural therapy - Dr Heather Sequeira and Dr Jill Mytton Compassion focused therapy - Sunil Lad and Jenika Patel Dialectical Behaviour Therapy - Michaela Swales and Christine Dunkley Ecotherapy - Nick Totton Eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR) - Catherine Kerr and Liz Royle Emotion-focused therapy - Ladislav Timulak Existential therapy - Emmy van Deurzen Feminist Therapy - Liz Ballinger Gestalt Therapy - Faisal Mahmood and Emma Flax Gender, Sex and Relationship Diversity Therapy - Dominic Davies and Silva Neves Interpersonal Psychotherapy - Elizabeth Robinson and Catherine Edmunds Jungian Analytical Psychology - Ruth Williams Lacanian Therapy - Lionel Bailly Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy - Adam J. Scott and Kate Adam Multimodal Therapy - Stephen Palmer Narrative Therapy - Fiona Stirling and John McLeod Person-Centred Therapy - Keith Tudor Personal Construct Therapy - David Winter Pluralistic Therapy - Christine Kupfer, John McLeod and Mick Cooper Psychoanalytic Therapy - Jessica Yakeley Psychodynamic Interpersonal Therapy - Richard J. Brown, Sara Bardsley and Vanessa Herbert Psychodynamic Therapy - Dwight Turner Schema Therapy - Konstantina Kolonia and Helen Kyritsi The Skilled Helper Model - Val Wosket and Peter Jenkins Solution-Focused Brief Therapy - Guy Shennan Transactional Analysis - Charlotte Sills and Keith Tudor Lifespan, modalities, and technology Counselling children - Kathryn Geldard and Rebecca Yin Foo Counselling young people - Kathryn Geldard and Rebecca Yin Foo Counselling older people - Anne Hayward and Ken Laidlaw Couple Therapy - Cate Campbell Systemic family therapy - Rudi Dallos Group therapy - Stephen Paul Electronically Delivered Text Therapy - Kate Anthony and Stephen Goss Videoconferencing Therapy - Zehra Ersahin Counselling by Telephone - Maxine Rosenfield Wider uses of technologies in therapy - Stephen Goss, DeeAnna Merz Nagel, and Kate Anthony Settings Working in Schools - Shira Baram Working in Colleges and Universities - Kirsten Amis Working with the Media - Elaine Kasket Working with neuroscience and neuropsychology - David Goss Private practice - Gareth Williams Working in primary care - Zubeida Ali and Satinder Panesar Short Term Therapy - Alex Coren Workplace Therapy - Charlotte Conn and Aashiya Patel Working in Forensic Settings - Jenika Patel and Sunil Lad Coaching - Zsofia Anna Utry and Stephen Palmer
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Praise for the previous edition: This book covers many of the current approaches, issues and trends within modern-day Counselling and Psychotherapy. It is research-informed, and its contributors are the current leading proponents and researchers in their field. This is a useful volume, for all who work in the field of psychological healing, to have on their professional bookcase as a source of reference and referral. -- Professor Peter Gubi Praise for the previous edition: The earlier editions of this comprehensive Handbook were the best and most comprehensive of the overviews of the discipline. Encyclopaedic in its scope, this new edition is exceptional in providing expert introductions to updated and brand new chapters by leading scholars. It is an essential reference for browsing and for concise reviews of everything practitioners and students might need to find out more about in the field. -- Associate Professor Jeannie Wright Praise for the previous edition: The latest edition of this classic reference work is encyclopedic and authoritative, but filled with pithy descriptions and lively examples. It is both deeply rooted in the history of the field and up-to-date with exciting new entries. The editors should be proud of the gift they have crafted for the current generation of counselling and psychotherapy students as well as practitioners. -- Professor Robert Elliott Praise for the previous edition: Bringing new insight into contemporary presenting issues, approaches and provision, this updated Handbook presents a stunning collection of material about every aspect of modern-day counselling and psychotherapy. The range of perspective and the standard of authorship is simply breath-taking, and the book is a gold-standard reference text for trainers, providers and trainees alike. -- Professor John Nuttall