About the Book
A Practical, Hands-on Reference for Professionals, Students and Researchers
Developed under the auspices of Dr. Florence W. Kaslow, one of the world's best known experts in the field of psychotherapy, this ground-breaking work is the first and only reference to provide a detailed analysis of the four major psychotherapy approaches-in both theory and in practice.
Each expertly edited volume is organized by specific client populations: children, adolescents and young adults, adults, families and couples, and groups - allowing the reader to compare each approach and focus on those specific populations and approaches that suit their studies or practice.
Comprehensive yet practical, each volume addresses the major psychological and emotional disturbances that each psychotherapy approach is most effective in treating and provides realistic case examples that bring each approach to life - making this a truly hands-on reference for practitioners, students, and researchers.
Volume 1: Psychodynamic/Object Relations, Jeffrey J. Magnavita, PhD, Volume Editor, Connecticut Center for Short Term Dynamic Psychotherapy
Volume 2: Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches, Terence Patterson, EdD, Volume Editor, University of San Francisco
Volume 3: Interpersonal / Humanistic / Existential, Robert F. Massey, PhD, and Sharon Davis Massey, PhD, Volume Editors, Seton Hall University
Volume 4: Integrative/Eclectic, Jay L. Lebow, PhD, Volume Editor, The Family Institute at Northwestern University
Table of Contents:
VOLUME 2 Foreword (Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy).
Preface (Florence W. Kaslow).
SECTION ONE: PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH CHILDREN.
Chapter 1. Structural Family Therapy: An Elaboration of Theory and Practice (C. Wayne Jones and Marion Lindblad-Goldberg).
Chapter 2. The Central Role of Culture: Working with Asian Children and Families (Christine M. Chao).
Chapter 3. Play in Therapy with Abused Children (Eliana Gil).
Chapter 4. Existential/Experiential Approaches to Child and Family Psychotherapy (Volker Thomas).
Chapter 5. A Biopsychosocial Approach to Play Therapy with Maltreated Children (Laura Palmer, Anne R. Farrar and Nouriman Ghahary).
SECTION TWO: PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG ADULTS.
Chapter 6. Solution-Focused Brief Therapy with Adolescents (Joel K. Simon and Insoo Kim Berg).
Chapter 7. An Integrative Approach to Assessment and Intervention with Adolescents of Color (Arpana G. Inman, Kwamia N. Rawls, Marisol M. Meza and Andraé L. Brown).
Chapter 8. Adlerian Therapy: A Century of Tradition and Research (Robert Sherman and Anselm Nwaorgu).
Chapter 9. School-Based Community Family Therapy for Adolescents at Risk (Norbert A. Wetzel and Hinda Winawer).
SECTION THREE: PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH ADULTS.
Chapter 10. A Relational-Cultural Perspective in Therapy (Judith V. Jordan).
Chapter 11. Existential/Humanistic Psychotherapy (Paul E. Bracke and James F. T. Bugental).
Chapter 12. Spiritually-Sensitive Psychotherapy (Harry J. Aponte).
Chapter 13. Existential Treatment with HIV/AIDS Clients (Eugene W. Farber).
Chapter 14. Logotherapy (Elisabeth Lukas and Bianca Zwang Hirsch).
SECTION FOUR. PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH FAMILIES AND COUPLES.
Chapter 15. Couple Therapy as Transforming Process: Reflections on Couples Stories (Maurizio Andolfi, (Joseph Kabali, Translator).
Chapter 16. Existential Dilemmas and Skill Building in Couple Therapy (Adriana Balaguer Dunn).
Chapter 17. Resilience and Human Rights Activism in Women's Life Stories (Pilar Hernández and Janine Roberts).
Chapter 18. Redecision Family Therapy (Vann S. Joines).
Chapter 19. Contextual Therapy (Catherine Ducommun-Nagy).
Chapter 20. Systems as Interconnecting Social-Psychological Processes: Existential Foundations of Families (Robert F. Massey).
SECTION FIVE: GROUP PSYCHOTHERAPY.
Chapter 21. Psychodrama (Alan Jacobs).
Chapter 22. Transactional Analysis (Robert F. Massey, Gordon Hewitt and Carlo Moiso).
Chapter 23. Body-Centered Psychotherapy (William F. Cornell).
Chapter 24. Biopsychosocial and Spiritual Treatment of Trauma (Anie Kalayjian).
SECTION SIX: SPECIAL TOPICS.
Chapter 25. International Perspectives on Professional Ethics (Marilyn Peterson Armour, Ingeborg Haug, with Dorothy Becvar, Helen Braun, Mony Elkaim, Shibusawa Fazuko and Augustine Nwoye).
Chapter 26. An Interpersonal-Systemic and Developmental Approach to Supervision (Sharon Davis Massey and Linda Combs).
Chapter 27. Humanistic, Interpersonal, and Existential Psychotherapies: Review and Synthesis (Sharon Davis Massey).
Author Index.
Subject Index.
VOLUME 3
Foreword (Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy).
Preface (Florence W. Kaslow).
SECTION ONE: PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH CHILDREN.
Chapter 1. Structural Family Therapy: An Elaboration of Theory and Practice (C. Wayne Jones and Marion Lindblad-Goldberg).
Chapter 2. The Central Role of Culture: Working with Asian Children and Families (Christine M. Chao).
Chapter 3. Play in Therapy with Abused Children (Eliana Gil).
Chapter 4. Existential/Experiential Approaches to Child and Family Psychotherapy (Volker Thomas).
Chapter 5. A Biopsychosocial Approach to Play Therapy with Maltreated Children (Laura Palmer, Anne R. Farrar and Nouriman Ghahary).
SECTION TWO: PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG ADULTS.
Chapter 6. Solution-Focused Brief Therapy with Adolescents (Joel K. Simon and Insoo Kim Berg).
Chapter 7. An Integrative Approach to Assessment and Intervention with Adolescents of Color (Arpana G. Inman, Kwamia N. Rawls, Marisol M. Meza and Andraé L. Brown).
Chapter 8. Adlerian Therapy: A Century of Tradition and Research (Robert Sherman and Anselm Nwaorgu).
Chapter 9. School-Based Community Family Therapy for Adolescents at Risk (Norbert A. Wetzel and Hinda Winawer).
SECTION THREE: PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH ADULTS.
Chapter 10. A Relational-Cultural Perspective in Therapy (Judith V. Jordan).
Chapter 11. Existential/Humanistic Psychotherapy (Paul E. Bracke and James F. T. Bugental).
Chapter 12. Spiritually-Sensitive Psychotherapy (Harry J. Aponte).
Chapter 13. Existential Treatment with HIV/AIDS Clients (Eugene W. Farber).
Chapter 14. Logotherapy (Elisabeth Lukas and Bianca Zwang Hirsch).
SECTION FOUR. PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH FAMILIES AND COUPLES.
Chapter 15. Couple Therapy as Transforming Process: Reflections on Couples Stories (Maurizio Andolfi, (Joseph Kabali, Translator).
Chapter 16. Existential Dilemmas and Skill Building in Couple Therapy (Adriana Balaguer Dunn).
Chapter 17. Resilience and Human Rights Activism in Women's Life Stories (Pilar Hernández and Janine Roberts).
Chapter 18. Redecision Family Therapy (Vann S. Joines).
Chapter 19. Contextual Therapy (Catherine Ducommun-Nagy).
Chapter 20. Systems as Interconnecting Social-Psychological Processes: Existential Foundations of Families (Robert F. Massey).
SECTION FIVE: GROUP PSYCHOTHERAPY.
Chapter 21. Psychodrama (Alan Jacobs).
Chapter 22. Transactional Analysis (Robert F. Massey, Gordon Hewitt and Carlo Moiso).
Chapter 23. Body-Centered Psychotherapy (William F. Cornell).
Chapter 24. Biopsychosocial and Spiritual Treatment of Trauma (Anie Kalayjian).
SECTION SIX: SPECIAL TOPICS.
Chapter 25. International Perspectives on Professional Ethics (Marilyn Peterson Armour, Ingeborg Haug, with Dorothy Becvar, Helen Braun, Mony Elkaim, Shibusawa Fazuko and Augustine Nwoye).
Chapter 26. An Interpersonal-Systemic and Developmental Approach to Supervision (Sharon Davis Massey and Linda Combs).
Chapter 27. Humanistic, Interpersonal, and Existential Psychotherapies: Review and Synthesis (Sharon Davis Massey).
Author Index.
Subject Index.
VOLUME 4
Foreword (M. Goldfried).
Preface (F. Kaslow).
Chapter 1. Integrative and Eclectic Therapies at the Beginning of the Twenty-First Century (Jay Lebow).
SECTION ONE: CHILD-FOCUSED PSYCHOTHERAPY.
Chapter 2. Systemic Approach to the Treatment of Child Sexual Abuse (Mary-Jo Barrett and Terry S. Trepper).
Chapter 3. A Biopsychosocial Treatment Approach for Depressed Children and Adolescents (Nadine J. Kaslow, Monica L. Baskin and Sarah C. Wyckoff).
Chapter 4. A Biopsychosocial Approach to Child Health (Beatrice L. Wood and Bruce D. Miller).
SECTION TWO: ADOLESCENT-FOCUSED PSYCHOTHERAPY.
Chapter 5. Brief Strategic Family Therapy (José Szapocznik, Michael S. Robbins, Victoria B. Mitrani, Daniel A. Santisteban, Olga Hervis and Robert A. Williams).
Chapter 6. Functional Family Therapy: A Model for Treating High-Risk, Acting-Out Youth (James F. Alexander and Thomas L. Sexton).
Chapter 7. Integrative Treatment Development: Multidimensional Family Therapy for Adolescent Substance Abuse (Cynthia Rowe, Howard A. Liddle, Katrina McClintic and Tanya J. Quille).
SECTION THREE: ADULT-FOCUSED PSYCHOTHERAPY.
Chapter 8 Transtheoretical Therapy (James O. Prochaska and Carlo C. DiClemente).
Chapter 9. Client directed, Outcome Informed Clinical Work (Scott D. Miller, Barry L. Duncan and Mark A. Hubble).
Chapter 10. Emotion-focused Therapy (Leslie S. Greenberg and Robert Elliott).
Chapter 11. The Multimodal Assessment Therapy Approach (Arnold A. Lazarus).
Chapter 12. Systematic Treatment Selection and Prescriptive Therapy (Larry E. Beutler, Shabia Alomohamed, Carla Moleiro and Robert Romanelli).
Chapter 13. Cognitive Interpersonal Psychotherapy (David Marcotte and Jeremy D. Safran).
Chapter 14 .An Assimilative Approach to Integrative Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (George Stricker and Jerrold Gold).
Chapter 15. A Cognitive-Behavioral Assimilative Integration (Hal Arkowitz and Barton J. Mann).
SECTION FOUR: PSYCHOTHERAPIES FOCUSED ON COUPLES AND FAMILIES.
Chapter 16. Integrative-Problem Centered Therapy (William M. Pinsof).
Chapter 17. Metaframeworks (Douglas C. Breunlin and Betty Mackune-Karrer).
Chapter 18. Integrative Behavioral Couples Therapy (Brian D. Doss, Janice T. Jones, and Andrew Christensen).
Chapter 19. Postmodern Sex Therapy (Joseph LoPiccolo).
Chapter 20. An Integrative Approach for Treating Families with Child Custody and Visitation Disputes (Jay Lebow).
Chapter 21. Internal Systems Therapy (Barton J. Mann and Richard C. Schwartz).
SECTION FIVE: GROUP-FOCUSED PSYCHOTHERAPY.
Chapter 22. A Dialogue Group Approach with Descendents of Holocaust Perpetrators and Victims (Florence W. Kaslow).
Chapter 23. Multicouple Group Therapy for Domestic Violence (Sandra M. Stith, Eric E. McCollum, Karen H. Rosen and Lisa D. Locke).
Chapter 24. Effective Group Psychotherapies (K. Roy MacKenzie).
SECTION SIX: SPECIAL TOPICS.
Chapter 25. Training in Integrative/Eclectic Psychotherapy (Jay Lebow).
Chapter 26. Ethical and Risk Management Issues in Integrative Therapy (Michael C. Gottlieb and Caren C. Cooper).
Chapter 27. Emergent Issues in Integrative and Eclectic Psychotherapies (Jay Lebow).
Author Index.
Subject Index.
About the Author :
Editor in Chief: Florence Kaslow, Ph.D. is Director of the Florida Couples and Family Institute and President of Kaslow Associates in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. She is also a Visiting Professor of Medical Psychology in Psychiatry at Duke University Medical Center (Durham, North Carolina) and a Visiting Professor of Psychology at Florida Institute of Technology. Dr. Kaslow is editor or author of 22 books, over 50 book chapters and 160 plus articles in the professional literature. Volume 1: Jeffrey J. Magnavita, Ph.D., ABPP is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and is both a licensed psychologist and marriage and family therapist. He is the founder of the Connecticut Center for Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy and an adjunct professor of clinical psychology at the University of Hartford's Graduate Institute of Professional Psychology.
Volume 2: Terence Patterson, EdD is Director of Training in the Counseling Psychology Doctoral Program at the University of San Francisco, a Diplomat in Family Psychology (ABPP), and 2001 President of the Division of Family Psychology of the American Psychological Association. His professional focus includes behavioral couple therapy, ethics, and theoretical paradigms.
Volume 3: Robert F. Massey, Ph.D. is a Professor and Director of the Marriage and Family M.S., Ed.S., and Ph.D. Programs in the Department of Professional Psychology and Family Therapy at Seton Hall University, South Orange, NJ, USA. He is an Approved Supervisor in the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy and a Certified Transactional Analyst. He writes on and researches integrative systems thinking, couple and family relationships, personality theories, and spirituality in contexts.
Volume 3: Sharon Davis Massey, Ph.D., is a licensed marriage and family therapist and an AAMFT Approved Supervisor. She supervises the clinical work of university students and is an Adjunct Professor in the marriage and family programs at Seton Hall University, South Orange, NJ, USA. Her professional interests center around the development of humans within their evolving contexts, supervision from an interpersonal-systemic frame of reference, and emergent models of scientific inquiry.
Volume 4: Jay Lebow, Ph.D., ABPP is a Senior Staff Therapist and Research Consultant at The Family Institute at Northwestern and Adjunct Associate Professor at Northwestern University. He is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and Board Certified in Family Psychology. He is the author of over 100 articles and book chapters, primarily dealing with integrative couple and family therapy, research assessing couple and family therapy, the evaluation of mental health treatment, and intervention and assessment in child custody disputes. His research focuses on outcome in couple and family therapy.