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Autore: |
Briggs Andrew
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Titolo: |
Waiting to be found : papers on children in care / / by Andrew Briggs
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Pubblicazione: | Boca Raton, FL : , : Routledge, an imprint of Taylor and Francis, , [2018] |
©2012 | |
Edizione: | First edition. |
Descrizione fisica: | 1 online resource (353 p.) |
Disciplina: | 155.446 |
Soggetto topico: | Child psychiatry |
Child psychology | |
Soggetto genere / forma: | Electronic books. |
Note generali: | Description based upon print version of record. |
Nota di bibliografia: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Nota di contenuto: | COVER; contents; series editor's preface; Acknowledgements; About the editor and contributors; Preface; Foreword; Introduction; PART I Canham:writer and clinical thinker; chapter one - Focusing on the relationship with the child; SELECTED PAPERS BY HAMISH CANHAM; chapter two - Growing up in residential care [1998]; chapter three - The development of the concept of time in fostered and adopted children [1999]; chapter four - Exporting the Tavistock model to social services: clinical consultative and teaching aspects [2000]; chapter five - Group and gang states of mind [2002] |
chapter six - The relevance of the Oedipus myth to fostered and adopted children [2003]chapter seven - Spitting, kicking and stripping: technical difficulties encountered in the treatment of deprived children [2004]; PART II Working with children in care; chapter eight - The expressed wishes and feelings of children; chapter nine - Innate possibilities: experiences of hope in child psychotherapy; chapter ten - The riddle of the Sphinx; chapter eleven - Neglect and its effects: understandings from developmental science and the therapist's countertransference | |
chapter twelve - Creating a "third position" to explore oedipal dynamics in the task and organization of a therapeutic schoolchapter thirteen - Facing reality: Oedipus and the organization; chapter fourteen - Turning a blind eye or daring to see: how might consultation and clinical interventions help Looked After Children and their carers to cope with mental pain?; chapter fifteen - Physical control, strip searching, and segregation: observations on the deaths of children in custody | |
chapter sixteen - Observation, containment, countertransference: the contribution of psychoanalytic thinking to contemporary relationship-based social work practiceEndpiece; Publications by Hamish Canham; References; Index | |
Sommario/riassunto: | This book is about children in State care and its title - Waiting to be Found - is derived from an observation about such children by the child psychotherapist Hamish Canham. In one of his early papers Canham wrote that children's homes often reminded him of "station waiting rooms with children waiting to move on to their next placement and staff waiting for the next shift, or working as a residential social worker in order to get experience before moving on to do something else or further training." This book takes his comment about waiting rooms as its starting point, with each contributor building upon its central implications. The contributors to this book each explore the importance of relationship; whether between child and care system, child and clinician or other practitioner, practitioners with practitioners, or individuals with the organisation in which they work. Overall they demonstrate when attention is paid to any one of these relationships this determines emotional-psycho-social success for the child, and how when this attention is missing serious issues arise. As a snapshot view of the way Canham's focus is used today they show that he was ahead of his time in thinking about the structure and function of what we now recognise as the corporate parent. |
Titolo autorizzato: | Waiting to be found ![]() |
ISBN: | 0-429-90952-7 |
0-429-48475-5 | |
1-283-60996-7 | |
9786613922410 | |
1-78241-026-0 | |
Formato: | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione: | Inglese |
Record Nr.: | 9910462340103321 |
Lo trovi qui: | Univ. Federico II |
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