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Conjunctions engages separately and connectively with therapeutic social work practice, psychoanalytically informed research methods and philosophy, as well as contemporary human service organisational cultures and predicaments, and the societal dynamics affecting social work and psychoanalysis.
Table des matières
Series Editors' PrefaceIntroduction In praise of tragedy: social work, psychoanalysis, and society
I Practice 1 The use of self in social work practice
2 The weight of the world: emotional and relational capacities for doing child protection work
II Organizations 3 Legend, myth, and idea: on the fate of a great paper
4 Spotlit: defences against anxiety
5 Talk talk: what is the "Tavistock Model"?
6 Institutional racism: can our organizations change?
7 Trauma, truth, and the court
III Politics, policy, and culture 8 A short psycho-social history of British child abuse and protection
9 The shock of the real: psychoanalysis, modernity, survival
10 Containing tensions: psychoanalysis and modern policymaking
11 "Be quiet and listen": thinking differently about social policy
IV Research 12 Hearing the grass grow: emotional and epistemological challenges of practice-near research
13 Front-line services, complexity, research, and policy
14 Entering the underworld: unconscious life and the research process
15 Soft eyes: observation as research
V And finally . . . 16 Hearing the bluebird sing: on death, dying, and social work in contemporary human service organizations
A propos de l'auteur
Andrew Cooper, a registered social worker and psychoanalytic psychotherapist, is Professor of Social Work at the Tavistock Centre and the University of East London. He continues to practise as a clinical social worker in the Adolescent Family Therapy service at the Tavistock, leads the Professional Doctorate in Social Work and Social Care programmes there, and works as a consultant to teams and organizations. In addition to his book
Borderline Welfare: Fear and Fear of Feeling in Modern Welfare (co-authored with J. Lousada, 2005), he has written widely about therapeutic and relationship-based social work practice and research as well as the policy contexts that support or impede these practices.
Résumé
Conjunctions engages separately and connectively with therapeutic social work practice, psychoanalytically informed research methods and philosophy, as well as contemporary human service organisational cultures and predicaments, and the societal dynamics affecting social work and psychoanalysis.
Texte suppl.
"In these searching reflections on the practices and institutions of social work and psychotherapy, Andrew Cooper throws much light on the psychosocial dynamics of contemporary welfare. While drawing deeply on his personal experience, his analysis points to some answers to major questions about values and knowledge in social policy: how may we best respond to the individual sufferings stemming from societal ills and human tragedies, and how may the humane insights of psychoanalysis contribute to that task?"- Barry Richards, Professor of Political Psychology, Bournemouth University, UK
"This collection of published and new papers is a testament to Andrew Cooper’s distinctive ability to digest and convey complex, professional and personal experiences and ideas in accessible, engaging and nourishing ways. The breadth of the book’s focus- from individual to societal levels of engagement-and the depth of its theoretical application- exploring psychoanalytic and systemic thinking in contemporary welfare contexts- distinguishes it as a publication that makes a significant contribution to the development of the professional fields of social work, social policy and psychoanalysis."-Professor Gillian Ruch, Department of Social Work and Social Care, University of Sussex, UK"It is an important collection of essays (which function as an integrated and coherent whole) and not just for social workers or social work researchers. It contains the hard work of emotional processing, which can act as an example for anyone who wants to approach the difficult task of thinking about some of the core issues involved in what it is to be human in human society."
-Steve Bambrough, Journal of Social Work Practice