Brief person-centred therapies /
edited by Keith Tudor.
- First edition.
- viii, 208 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
- Brief therapies series .
- Brief therapies series. .
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction / Time, limits, and person-centred therapies / Integrating person-centred and experiential therapies -- Integrative experimental psychotherapy in brief / Getting the most from the therapy hour: integrating experiential and brief therapy / Traumatic incident reduction and applied metapsychology techniques: operationalising Rogerian theory in a brief therapy practice / Practice in context -- Time-limited, client-centered psychotherapy: one case / Working sensitively with time: person-centred therapy in a university counselling service / 'In the world, but not of it': person-centred counselling in primary care / Expert systems versus moments of volatility: a person-centred therapist's perspective of employee assistance programmes / Overcoming the effects of an aggravated burglary: traumatic incident reduction in action / This could be the last time: person-centred counselling with young men in a young offenders' institution / Brief encounters: time-conscious person-centred therapy with couples / A process of transformation: time-limited group counselling with women survivors of childhood sexual abuse / Epilogue / An illustration of the eight communication exercises in TIR training in terms of Rogers' six conditions / Time-limited group counselling with women survivors of childhood sexual abuse: weekly log of themes / Keith Tudor -- Keith Tudor -- Mia Leijssen and Robert Elliott -- Bala Jaison -- Henry J. Whitfield -- Madge K. Lewis, Carl R. Rogers and John M. Shlien -- Paul McGahey -- Isabel Gibbard -- Pam Winter -- Henry J. Whitfield -- Barrie Hopwood -- Keith Tudor -- Très Roche -- Keith Tudor -- Henry J. Whitfield -- Très Roche. 1. Pt. I. 2. 3. 4. Pt. II. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. App. 1. App. 2.
"Can the person-centred approach work in time-limited counselling and psychotherapy? This is a question that many practitioners grapple with as demand for brief therapy increases - particularly in the public sector. Brief Person-Centred Therapies is the first book to tackle the subject, bringing together the experience and insights of a leading international team of person-centred specialists. The book examines the "theoretical fit" between the person-centred approach and brief therapy. It also explores the issues which arise when working briefly in a range of different settings, including primary care, higher education and business."--Publisher's website.