000 04221nam a2200241 a 4500
001 nice12345678
003 Monogr.mrc
005 20200112140057.0
008 11-Sep-18s2011 Lona grp 000 0 eng
020 _a9781412915373
_c1872.5
082 0 0 _aO41.4
_bEV151
100 _aEvans, Kathy M
245 _aIntroduction to Feminist Therapy
_b Strategies for Social and Individual Change
260 _aLondon
_bSage Publications, Inc
_c2011
300 _a220p
500 _aincludes index and biblioraphy
505 2 _aChapter 1. Feminist Therapy: Roots and Branches 1 Feminism and Feminist Philosophy 2 Women`s Liberation and the Feminist Movement 3 Feminisms: A Diversity of Positions 4 Precursors of Feminist Therapy 6 Feminist Challenges to Traditional Counseling and Psychotherapy 7 Challenges to Feminist Therapy 9 Summary References 11 Chapter 2. Feminist Therapy: A Social and Individual Change Model 13 Feminist Therapy as a Theoretical Orientation 14 Common Factors in Feminist Therapy 15 Feminist Therapy, Diversity, and Social Justice 20 Feminist Therapy, Power, and Culture 21 Being a Feminist Therapist: A Feminist Therapist`s Perspective 21 Summary 22 Definitions Essential to Understanding Feminist Therapy 22 References 23 Chapter 3. Ethics and Values in Feminist Counseling and Psychotherapy 25 Ethics and the Mental Health Professions 26 Values and Feminist Ethics 29 A Feminist Ethical Stance: The Feminist Therapy Institute Code of Ethics 31 Social Justice Perspectives 43 Special Issues for Ethical Feminist Therapists 46 Feminist Therapy Ethical Decision-Making Models 48 Summary For Further Discussion Definitions References Chapter 4. The Importance of Gender Roles Early Socialization of Gender Roles Gender Roles and Career Decisions Societal Expectations of the Genders Gender Roles in U.S. Diverse Groups Summary References Chapter 5. Mental Health and Diagnosis in the Context of Feminist Therapy Mental Health and Pathology The Origin of Psychological Distress Mental Health Diagnosis The Medical Model and Diagnosis Potential for Counselor Bias Summary References Chapter 6. Feminist Conceptualization Feminist Conceptualization: Essential Elements The Skills of Feminist Conceptualization Major Assumptions of Feminist Conceptualization Reframing Clients` Distress Process Three Sources of Client Distress Summary References Chapter 7. Establishing and Maintaining the Egalitarian Relationship The Importance of Power in the Therapeutic Relationship Mental Health Professionals and Clients in Relationship Purpose and Intent of the Egalitarian Relationship Strategies for Establishing and Maintaining the Egalitarian Relationship The Therapist`s Perspective Summary For Further Discussion Exercises and Examples 135 References 135 Chapter 8. Gender-Role and Power Analyses 137 Gender-Role Analysis 139 Power Analysis 139 How Gender-Role Analysis Helps 139 Summary: Gender-Role Analysis 151 Power Analysis 152 Definitions of Power 153 Summary 159 Additional Readings and Materials for Consultation 159 References 160 Chapter 9- Social Change and Empowerment 161 Feminist Therapy, Privilege, and Society 162 Feminist Therapy and Social Justice 165 Feminist Therapy and Empowerment 170 The Current Zeitgeist of Social Change and Feminist Therapy 172 Summary 177 References 177 Chapter 10. Feminist Therapy in Clinical Practice 179 Integrating Theories 181 Assimilative Integration 182 Theoretical Integration 185 The Case of Morgan 187 Summary 193 References 194 Chapter 11. Critical Case Studies 195 The Tenets of Feminist Therapy and Feminist Therapy Skills 195 Egalitarian Relationship 196 Empowerment 198 The Personal Is the Political 199 Valuing the Female Experience/Putting Female Experience in the Center 201 Critical Case Studies and Ethical Implications 202 Case Studies for Discussion 207 Your Own Case Study 210 Reference 211
700 1 _aKincade, Elizabeth Ann
700 1 _aSeem, Susan Rachael
902 _bTFS
942 _cBK
999 _c82286
_d82286