Counseling Ethics for the 21st Century: A Case-Based Guide to Virtuous Practice
Autor Elliot D. Cohen, Gale S. Cohenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 apr 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 1506345476
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 187 x 232 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: SAGE Publications
Colecția Sage Publications, Inc
Locul publicării:Thousand Oaks, United States
Recenzii
"As one of the founders of the philosophical counseling movement and inventor of Logic-Based Therapy, Elliot D. Cohen has once again made an enormous contribution to the literature in his new book co-authored with Gale Spieler Cohen. In Counseling Ethics for the 21stCentury, the Cohens provide an original analysis of the morality of counseling by examining many ethical challenges that beset all types of professional therapists and mental health practitioners. They argue for what a virtuous therapist should be like while helping others and address many facets of practice including cultivating good character, applying ethical standards, being mindful of the issue of confidentiality and privacy, internet based-interventions, record keeping, working with vulnerable and abused populations, as well as respecting and working with diversity issues. The authors’ introduce the technical principles of applying a step-based approach to ethical decision making peppered with lengthy case examples in a wide array of counseling situations that give the reader a real feel for what it is like to be in the consulting room. This is an ideal text for graduate students first being introduced to the counseling process."
“The orientation of this text around case studies makes it much more understandable and usable for master’s-level students in their quest for excellence in counseling.”
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART I. Becoming a Virtuous Therapist
Chapter 1: Building Character: Virtues of Excellent Practitioners
Chapter 2: Being Trustworthy
Case Studies: Two Resistant Clients
PART II. RESOLVING ETHICAL ISSUES
Chapter 3: Applying Ethical Standards
Case Study: A Clash of Values Inside a Fundamentalist Christian Family
Chapter 4: Using an Ethical Decision-Making Process
Case Study: A Hateful Client
PART III. NAVIGATING KEY CONCEPTS: CONFIDENTIALITY AND INFORMED CONSENT
Chapter 5: Exercising Discretion
Case Study: A Dangerous Client
Chapter 6: Being Candid and Honest
Case Study: Withholding Information From a Depressed Client
PART IV. EMPOWERING AND ADVOCATING FOR VULNERABLE POPULATIONS
Chapter 7: Empowering Adult Victims of Domestic Abuse
Case Studies: Physical and Emotional Abuse
Chapter 8: Exercising Courage in Protecting Children
Case Study: Child Sexual Abuse
PART V. COUNSELING ACROSS MULTIPLE ROLES AND CULTURES
Chapter 9: Being Loyal and Fair to Clients
Case Study: Sex with a Former Client
Chapter 10: Being Respectful Across Diverse Cultures
Case Study: Supervising a Supervisee Doing Cross-Cultural Counseling
PART VI. COUNSELING IN CYBERSPACE
Chapter 11: Being Diligent in the Digital Age
Case Study: A Case of Record Hacking
Chapter 12: Providing Competent Online Counseling Services
Case Study: A Suicidal Client
PART VII. DEFINING LIMITS OF CONFIDENTIALITY
Chapter 13: Being Benevolent
Case Study: A Terminally Ill Client Contemplating Suicide
Chapter 14: Being Nonmalevolent
Case Study: A Sexually Active Client With HIV
Index
About the Authors
Notă biografică
Elliot D. Cohen, Ph.D., Brown University, is Professor and Chair of the Department of Humanities at Indian River State College, and Adjunct Professor of Clinical Ethics at Florida State University College of Medicine. He is also Executive Director of the National Philosophical Counseling Association (NPCA); President of the Institute of Critical Thinking Center for Logic-Based Therapy (LBT); and Editor-in-Chief of theInternational Journal of Applied Philosophy. Author of 22 published books and numerous articles in diverse areas of applied and professional ethics, and philosophical counseling, Dr. Cohen has developed and proposed model rules for professional codes of ethics including the American Counseling Association (ACA). He also writes a popular blog forPsychology Todaycalled,What Would Aristotle Do?