20%
139.90
CHF111.90
Download est disponible immédiatement
Synthesizing insights from psychiatry, social psychology, and anthropology, Voices of Trauma: Treating Survivors across Cultures sets out a framework for therapy that is as culturally informed as it is productive. An international panel of 23 therapists offers contextual knowledge on PTSD, coping skills, and other trauma sequelae as they affect survivors of traumatic events. Case studies from Egypt to Chechnya demonstrate various therapeutic approaches (and the Cultural Formation of Diagnosis from the DSM-IV), often integrated with social agencies outside the clinical setting. Authors explore the balance of inter- and intrapersonal factors in reactions to trauma, dispel misconceptions that hinder progress in treatment, and provide profound examples of mutual trust and empathy, even how the wounded may heal the therapist.
Highlights of the coverage:
Silence as a coping strategy: Sudanese refugee women.
Individual and group identity, Western and non-Western healing: a Chinese woman in Hong Kong.
Mother/infant psychotherapy with a Kosovar family.
Trauma and the bicultural self: New York's Dominican community and the crash of Flight 587.
Why war? Why genocide? A social psychology theory of collective violence
Transference, countertransference, and supervisory issues in intercultural treatment.
Today's political climate has made refugee mental health a growing public health issue. Voices of Trauma gives clinical and counseling psychologists, psychiatrists, psychotherapists, rescue and social workers, the tools to create healing on a global scale.
Auteur
Boris Drodek, M.D., M.A., is psychiatrist at Psychotrauma Centrum Zuid Nederland/Reinier van Arkel groep, 's-Hertogenbosch, the Netherlands, an international centre for treatment of victims of political and war violence. He is leading the residency training in social psychiatry, collaborating with different NGO's in post-war areas, teaching and giving trainings in psychotraumatology and transcultural psychiatry on a regular basis in the Netherlands and abroad. He is international director of the International Summer School of Psychotrauma in Dubrovnik, Croatia. He is author of several scientific publications and chapters to books and, together with John P. Wilson, editor of the Broken Spirits: The Treatment of Traumatized Asylum Seekers, Refugees, War and Torture Victims (New York: Brunner-Routledge, 2004).
John P. Wilson, Ph.D., is currently Professor of Psychology at Cleveland State University in Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.A.. He is a founding member and Past President of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ISTSS) and a Fellow of the American Institute of Stress. He is a Diplomate and Fellow of the American Academy of Experts in Traumatic Stress, a Fulbright Scholar and the International Director of the International Summer School of Psychotrauma in Dubrovnik, Croatia. Dr. Wilson is the author of ten books and over 30 monographs and chapters on traumatic stress syndromes. Research and clinical work developed by Dr. Wilson have led to consultations with different national and international agencies like the U.S. Army and Navy, Department of Veterans Affairs, The White House and The World Health Organization, where he developed mental health programs during the war in Bosnia in 1994/ 1995., and more recently in Croatia to aid victims of war trauma.
Texte du rabat
Synthesizing insights from psychiatry, social psychology, and anthropology, Voices of Trauma: Treating Survivors across Cultures sets out a framework for therapy that is as culturally informed as it is productive. An international panel of 23 therapists offers contextual knowledge on PTSD, coping skills, and other trauma sequelae as they affect survivors of traumatic events. Case studies from Egypt to Chechnya demonstrate various therapeutic approaches (and the Cultural Formation of Diagnosis from the DSM-IV), often integrated with social agencies outside the clinical setting. Authors explore the balance of inter- and intrapersonal factors in reactions to trauma, dispel misconceptions that hinder progress in treatment, and provide profound examples of mutual trust and empathy, even how the wounded may heal the therapist.
Highlights of the coverage:
Silence as a coping strategy: Sudanese refugee women.
Individual and group identity, Western and non-Western healing: a Chinese woman in Hong Kong.
Mother/infant psychotherapy with a Kosovar family.
Trauma and the bicultural self: New York's Dominican community and the crash of Flight 587.
Why war? Why genocide? A social psychology theory of collective violence
Transference, countertransference, and supervisory issues in intercultural treatment.
Today's political climate has made refugee mental health a growing public health issue. Voices of Trauma gives clinical and counseling psychologists, psychiatrists, psychotherapists, rescue and social workers, the tools to create healing on a global scale.
Contenu
The Rebirth of Contextual Thinking in Psychotraumatology.- Culture and Collective Violence: How Good People, Usually Men, do Bad Things.- Destroying the World to Save It.- Reversing Cultures: The Wounded Teaching the Healers.- Fourteen Djinns Migrate Across the Ocean.- Culturally Relevant Meanings and their Implications on Therapy for Traumatic Grief: Lessons Learned from a Chinese Female Client and Her Fortune-Teller.- The Story of Alex, an Armenian Man Who Encounters Evil Every Day.- Loss, Reconnection and Reconstruction: A Former Child Soldier's Return to Cambodia.- Silence as a Coping Strategy: The Case of Refugee Women in the Netherlands from South-Sudan who Experienced Sexual Violence in the Context of War.- Mobilising Social and Symbolic Resources in Transcultural Therapies with Refugees and Asylum Seekers: The Story of Mister Diallo.- Lost in the Desert - from Despair to Meaningful Existence: A Chechen Refugee Family Crossing Borders.- Survival As Subversion: When Youth Resistance Strategies Challenge Tradition, Religion, and Political Correctness.- "I Think He is Still Inside Me": Mother/Child Psychotherapy and Sandplay with a Kosovar Woman and Her Infant Son.- Lost in Limbo: Cultural Dimensions in Psychotherapy and Supervision with Temporary Protection Visa Holder from Afghanistan.- Latino New Yorkers and the Crash of Flight 587: Effects of Trauma on the Bicultural Self.- Clinical Supervision and Culture: a Challenge in the Treatment of Persons Traumatized by Persecution and Violence.- Are We Lost in Translations?: Unanswered Questions on Trauma, Culture and Posttraumatic Syndromes and Recommendations for Future Research.
20%