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Helping Families in Family Centers: Working at Therapeutic Practices

Laraine Beavis Editat de Linnet McMahon, Adrian Ward
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 apr 2001
The book is a comprehensive guide for family centre workers, and for all social workers working with children and families. Based on a psychodynamic approach emphasising the central importance of attachment in relationships, the book also applies systemic ideas and the 'therapeutic community' approach to the overall design of the centres.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781853028359
ISBN-10: 1853028355
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 160 x 230 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Editura: JESSICA KINGSLEY PUBLISHERS

Notă biografică

Linnet McMahon is Lecturer in Social Work at the University of Reading and has written The Handbook of Play Therapy (1992) and co-edited, with Adrian Ward, Intuition is Not Enough: Learning for Therapeutic Practice in Child Care (1998). She has worked in and written extensively about family centres. Adrian Ward is Senior Lecturer in Social Work at the University of East Anglia. He is the author of Working in Group Care: Social Work in Residential and Day Care Settings (1993). He has written several papers in this field and edits the international journal Therapeutic Communities.

Cuprins

Introduction, Linnet McMahon, University of Reading and Adrian Ward, University of East Anglia. Part 1. 1. Theory for practice in therapeutic family centres, Adrian Ward, University of East Anglia 2. Understanding parent-child relationships: Attachment and the inner world, Linnet McMahon, University of Reading. 3. Assessment and implications for intervention using an attachment perspective, Steve Farnfield, University of Reading. 4. Working therapeutically with children and parents in family centres, Linnet McMahon, University of Reading and Viv Dacre, formerly of Castlefield Family Centre. Part 2. 5. Therapeutic work, play and play therapy with children in family centres, Linnet McMahon, with case studies by Rosemary Lilley, Greenham House Family Units, and Denise Ledger. 6. A systemic approach to working with black families: Experiences in family service units, Yvonne Bailey Smith, Queen's Park Family Service Units. 7. Working with men in family centres, Paul Collett, Guardian ad Litem. 8. `Holding' as a way of enabling change in a statutory family centre, Sarah Musgrave, Gladstone Street Children's Resource Centre. 9. A family centre approach to early therapeutic intervention for young children and their families, Denise Ledger, Family Services Manager.10. Developing and auditing a local family centre feeding to thrive service, Anton Green, Penn Crescent Family Centre, Anne Kyle, Health Visitor and Madeleine St Clair, Princess Royal Hospital, Haywards Heath. 11. Management issues in creating a therapeutic environment, Christine Stones, New Fulford Family Centre. 12. Managing the impact of anxiety on the primary task of a family centre, Rosemary Lilley, Greenham House Family Centre. Part 3. 13. Soft structuring: the NEWPIN way of delivering empowerment, Anne Jenkins Hansen, NEWPIN. Part 4. 14. Transfer of learning: Reflections on a student placement in a family centre, Laraine Beavis, Paediatric Social Worker. Conclusion, Adrian Ward, University of East Anglia and Linnet McMahon, University of Reading. Appendices. Bibliography. Index.