Surviving Clinical Psychology
Routledge (Verlag)
978-1-138-36888-0 (ISBN)
This vital new book navigates the personal, professional and political selves on the journey to training in clinical psychology. Readers will be able to explore a range of ways to enrich their practice through a focus on identities and differences, relationships and power within organisations, supervisory contexts, therapeutic conventions and community approaches.
This book includes a rich exploration of how we make sense of personal experiences as practitioners, including chapters on self-formulation, personal therapy, and using services. Through critical discussion, practice examples, shared accounts and exercises, individuals are invited to reflect on a range of topical issues in clinical psychology. Voices often marginalised within the profession write side-by-side with those more established in the field, offering a unique perspective on the issues faced in navigating clinical training and the profession more broadly. In coming together, the authors of this book explore what clinical psychology can become.
Surviving Clinical Psychology invites those early on in their careers to link ‘the political’ to personal and professional development in a way that is creative, critical and values-based, and will be of interest to pre-qualified psychologists and researchers, and those mentoring early-career practitioners.
James Randall is a tattooed, vegetarian clinical psychologist working with children and young people within the National Health Service (NHS). He previously represented aspiring psychologists for 4 years as the co-chair of the Pre-Qualification Group within the British Psychological Society.
Dedication
Notes on contributors
Acknowledgements
Foreword: The things that matter
Peter Kinderman
The context of clinical psychology
What clinical psychology can become: An introduction
James Randall
What do clinical psychologists do anyway?
Annabel Head, Amy Obradovic, Sasha Nagra and Neha Bharat Shah
Making the most of your supervision: Reflecting on selves in context
James Randall, Angie Cucchi and Vasiliki Stamatopoulou
Restorying the journey: Enriching practice before training
James Randall, Sarah Oliver, Jacqui Scott, Amy Lyons, Hannah Morgan, Jessica Saffer and Lizette Nolte
Everyone reflects……but some reflections are more risky than others
Romena Toki and Angela Byrne
The Personal: The selves as human
On being a practitioner and a client
Molly Rhinehart, Emma Johnson and Kirsty Killick
Values in practice: Bringing social justice to our lives and work
Jacqui Scott, Laura Cole, Vasiliki Stamatopoulou and Romena Toki
Reflections on the therapeutic journey: Opening up dialogues around personal therapy
Amy Lyons and Elizabeth Malpass, with thanks to Silan Gyane
On the reconciliation of selves: Reflections on navigating professional domains
Danielle Chadderton and Marta Isibor
The Professional: The use of self in clinical psychology
‘Taking the plunge’: How reflecting on your personal and social GgRRAAAACCEEESSSS can tame your restraints and refresh your resources
John Burnham and Lizette Nolte
Self-formulation: Making sense of your own experiences
James Randall, Emma Johnson and Lucy Johnstone
Pebbles in Palms: Sustaining practices through training
Sarah Oliver, Hannah Morgan, James Randall, Amy Lyons, Jessica Saffer, Jacqui Scott and Lizette Nolte
Sustaining selfhood and embracing ‘selves’ in psychology: risks, vulnerabilities and sustaining relationships
Tanya Beetham and Kirstie Pope
The Political: Selves and politics in practice
Power in Practice: Questioning Psychiatric Diagnosis
Sasha Priddy and Katie Sydney
Power in context: Working within different organisational cultures and settings
Annabel Head, Jacqui Scott and Danielle Chadderton
It’s not just about therapy: Our ‘selves’ in our communities
Stephen Weatherhead, Ben Campbell, Cormac Duffy, Anna Duxbury, Hannah Iveson and Mary O’Reilly
The personal weight of political practice: A conversation between trainees
Farahnaaz Dauhoo, Lauren Canvin, Rosemary Kingston, Stella Mo and Sophie Stark
Epilogue: "Just stop talking and start to dance"
James Randall
Erscheinungsdatum | 13.12.2019 |
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Zusatzinfo | 10 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Halftones, black and white |
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 156 x 234 mm |
Gewicht | 600 g |
Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Psychologie ► Klinische Psychologie |
Medizin / Pharmazie ► Medizinische Fachgebiete ► Psychiatrie / Psychotherapie | |
ISBN-10 | 1-138-36888-1 / 1138368881 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-138-36888-0 / 9781138368880 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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