Psychodynamic Perspectives on Abuse
The Cost of Fear
Carol-Ann Hooper(Editor)
Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Published on 19. June 2000
Book
Hardback
320 pages
978-1-85302-685-0 (ISBN)
Description
Abuse is defined broadly and considered as a widespread phenomenon with a variety of manifestations and contexts. Its consequences, and the responses it may provoke, are discussed in detail with reference to three areas. In the personal context, the impact of abuse on an individual's development, emotional life and ability to participate in society is addressed. In the workplace, where the focus is upon working relationships and organizational goals, abuse may cause stress, undermine effectiveness and lead to legal redress: thus it involves a different set of problems and requires different treatment. In relation to society as a whole, the threat which abuse poses and the factors which determine policy are evaluated. "Psychodynamic Perspectives on Abuse" is unique in its range and focus, providing the cross-disciplinary approach to this problem which is essential for developing strategies to deal with it at all levels.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-85302-685-0 (9781853026850)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Content
Introduction - abuse, the individual and the social, Carol-Ann Hooper and Una MnCluskey. Part 1 The individual and interpersonal contexts of abuse: an object-relations perspective on the development of the person, Jeremy Hazell; attachment theory and abuse - a developmental perspective, Jeremy Holmes; relationships as a function of context, Frances B. Carter; is human nature intrinsically abusive? reflections on the psychodynamics of evil, Phil Mollon. Part 2 The social, cultural and political contexts of abuse: exile - paradoxes of loss and creativity, Nancy Caro Hollander; abuse in religious institutions - an exploration of the psychosocial dynamics in the Irish context, Una McCluskey; what cost assimilation and integration? working with transcultural issues, Lennox Thomas; intimacy, gender and abuse - the construction of masculinities, Stephen Frosh; sexual orientation and abuse, Francis Mondimore. Part 3 Working with individuals in clinical settings: inner silence - one of the impacts of emotional abuse upon the developing self, Susan Van Dias; treatment or torture? working with issues of abuse and torture in the transference, Shirley Truckle; the abuse of learning disabled people - living and working with the consequences, Valerie Sinason; dissociative identity disorder and memories of childhood abuse, Phil Mollon. Part 4 Working with individuals and groups in organizational settings: containment, supervision and abuse, Dick Agass; working as an organizational consultant with abuse encountered in the workplace, Judith Brearley. Part 5 Psychodynamic reflections on social policy: desire and the law, Andrew Cooper; social work responses to domestic violence in the context of child protection, Margaret Bell; reparative experience or repeated trauma? child sexual abuse and adult mental health services, Carol-Ann Hooper and Juliet Koprowska; the repudiated self - the failure of social welfare policy for older people, Joan Harbison.