Positions And Polarities In Contemporary Systemic Practice: The Legacy Of David Campbell (systemic Thinking And Practice Series)
by Charlotte Burck /
2013 / English / Kindle
56.7 MB Download
This book provides a rich collection of the work that has been
informed by the ideas of the eminent family therapist and clinical
psychologist, Dr David Campbell, who died in August 2009 .
Contributors are drawn from different fields and describe models
they have developed for organizational consultation, training,
therapy and research. The book includes a range of important
topics, key ideas which thread through contemporary theoretical
frameworks, a research study into young people’s experience of
parental mental illness, and the application of Dr Campbell’s use
of semantic polarity theory in supervision, research and clinical
practice. The innovative consultancy model developed by David
Campbell with Marianne Groenbaek is elaborated here. Personal
accounts of work in different contexts include a priest consulting
within his community, the use of self in training systemic
psychotherapists, the experience of consultation in academic
settings, and a narrative of a training course for psychiatrists.
Interspersed with these chapters are David Campbell's own
reflections concerning the development of his ideas and practice
over time. The book shows the value of simply expressed ideas
applied in complex circumstances and will be welcomed by many
different readers to enrich their thinking and practice.
This book provides a rich collection of the work that has been
informed by the ideas of the eminent family therapist and clinical
psychologist, Dr David Campbell, who died in August 2009 .
Contributors are drawn from different fields and describe models
they have developed for organizational consultation, training,
therapy and research. The book includes a range of important
topics, key ideas which thread through contemporary theoretical
frameworks, a research study into young people’s experience of
parental mental illness, and the application of Dr Campbell’s use
of semantic polarity theory in supervision, research and clinical
practice. The innovative consultancy model developed by David
Campbell with Marianne Groenbaek is elaborated here. Personal
accounts of work in different contexts include a priest consulting
within his community, the use of self in training systemic
psychotherapists, the experience of consultation in academic
settings, and a narrative of a training course for psychiatrists.
Interspersed with these chapters are David Campbell's own
reflections concerning the development of his ideas and practice
over time. The book shows the value of simply expressed ideas
applied in complex circumstances and will be welcomed by many
different readers to enrich their thinking and practice.