Additional Information
Book Details
Abstract
`I liked this book. Though I am not a family therapist, like most mental health nurses I try to bear in mind the family relationships of individuals I am working with. This is an enlightening text which not only offer a framework with which we can better understand the severe psychopathologies seen in forensic work, but also gives examples of how it may be used therapeutically' - Mental Health Practice
`I think this is an important book that crystallises complex theory into a user-friendly model, using case material and discussions from the therapeutic community. A must have for counsellors working with families, this will form part of the recommended reading on the Family Counselling course' - Barbara McKay, Relate Head of Training, Relate News
`The book provides a good overview of a number of recent approaches to working with families as well as how the author thinks about them' - Stephen Bray, Nurturing Potential
`Roger Lowe achieves the almost impossible task of bringing together various theories, techniques and case examples in clear and accessible ways. Readers of all disciplines, from front-line hard-pressed practitioners to students on therapy and social work courses, will be grateful for the simple and, above all, useful way he tackles the burning questions that arise in working with the family group. Highly recommended!' - Harvey Ratner, Brief Therapy Practice, London
Family Therapy introduces practitioners to the principles of using a constructive and collaborative approach with families. The approach builds on a strengths-based philosophy and focuses on enhancing family resilience and competence in a way that is both time-efficient and comprehensive. It brings together skills from contemporary models such as solution-focused, narrative and conversational therapies and adapts them to the specific challenges of working with family relationships. It is the first book to systematically integrate these influential approaches and apply them to family work.
Setting out a clear framework for practice, Roger Lowe describes the key tasks for the therapist as:
· hosting meetings
· negotiating concerns, and
· evoking family members' personal and relationship resources.
The framework is designed to be clear but flexible, and to allow practitioners to adapt it to their own situational needs. For example, it suggests ways for practitioners to selectively 'borrow' from other therapeutic models while retaining a constructive orientation. It also explores ways in which therapists can use their 'inner' conversation during a session as a tool to overcome obstacles to the therapeutic process. Although there is a common belief that the approach is only suited to brief interventions, the author also describes ways of working constructively over a longer period of time.
Throughout the book, case studies are included to show how the constructive framework is used in practice and to highlight a range of challenging situations that may be encountered during family therapy.
Roger Lowe's book provides a refreshingly different approach to working with families, which chimes with the growing interest in constructive approaches. It is written for trainees and for practitioners who are interested in developing their skills in this collaborative and optimistic approach.
`Roger Lowe achieves the almost impossible task of bringing together various theories, techniques and case examples in clear and accessible ways. Readers of all disciplines, from front-line hard-pressed practitioners to students on therapy and social work courses, will be grateful for the simple and, above all, useful way he tackles the burning questions that arise in working with the family group. Highly recommended!' - Harvey Ratner, Brief Therapy Practice, London
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Prelims (Contents, Introductory note and acknowledgements, Figures, Tables, Boxes, Acronyms and Abbreviations) | |||
PART I - UNDERSTANDING AND ANALYSING AGRICULTURAL DIVERSITY | |||
1. Cultivating biodiversity: setting the scene | |||
Harold Brookfield, Christine Padoch, Helen Parsons and Michael Stocking | |||
2. Agrodiversity and agrobiodiversity | |||
Harold Brookfield | |||
3. Agrodiversity at the scales of farm and landscape | |||
Harold Brookfield | |||
4. Agrodiversity, environmental protectoin and sustaining rural livelihoods: the global view | |||
Michael Stocking | |||
5. Guidelines on agrodiversity assessment | |||
Harold Brookfield, Michael Stocking and Muriel Brookfield | |||
6. Guidelines on the assessment of plant species diversity in agricultural landscapes | |||
Daniel J. Zarin, Guo Huijun and Lewis Enu-Kwesi | |||
7. Household Level Agrobiodiversity Assessment (HH-ABA) | |||
Guo Huijun, Christine Padoch, Fu Yongneng, Dao Zhiling and Kevin Coffey | |||
8. Quantitative methods for the analysis of agrodiversity | |||
Kevin Coffrey | |||
PART II - FOCUS ON PEOPLE | |||
9. Spotting expertise in a diverse and dynamic landscape | |||
Christine Padoch | |||
10. PLEC demonstration activities: a review of procedures and experiences | |||
Miguel Pinedo-Vasquez, Edwin A. Gyasi and Kevin Coffey | |||
11. Indigenous knowledge in space and time | |||
Kojo Sebastian Amanor | |||
12. Working with farmers is not simple: the case of PLEC Tanzania | |||
Fidelis B. S. Kaihura | |||
13. Genesis and purpose of the women farmers’ group at Jachie, central Ghana | |||
William Oduro | |||
PART III - AGRODIVERSITY CASE STUDIES | |||
14. Agrodiversity assessment and analysis in diverse and dynamic small-scale farms in Arumeru, Arusha, Tanzania | |||
Fidelis B. S. Kaihura, Paulo Ndondi and Edward Kemikimba | |||
15. Biodiversity as a product of smallholders responses to change in Amazonia | |||
Miguel Pinedo-Vasquez, Christine Padoch, David McGrath and Tereza Ximenes-Ponte | |||
16. From forests to field: incorporating smallholder knowledge in the camu-camu programme in Peru | |||
Miguel Pinedo-Vasquez and Mario Pinedo-Panduro | |||
17. Sustainable management of an Amazonian forest for timber production : a myth or reality? | |||
Miguel Pinedo-Vasquez and Fernando Rabelo | |||
18. Diversity of upland rice and of wild vegetables in Baka, Xishuangbanna, Yunnan | |||
Fu Yongneng and Chen Aiguo | |||
19. Evaluation of the cultivation of Ammomum villosum under tropical forest in southern Yunnan | |||
Guan Yuquin, Dao Zhiling and Cui Jingyun | |||
20. Diversity at household level in wet-rice fields at Daka, Xishuangbanna, Yunnan | |||
Fu Yongneng, Guo Huijun, Chen Aiguo and Cui Jingyun | |||
21. Promoting sustainable agriculture: the case of Baihualing, Yunnan | |||
Dao Zhiling, Du Xiaohong, Guo Huijun, Liang Luohui and Li Yingguang | |||
22. Intensification and diversification of land use in the highlands of northern Thailand | |||
Kanok Rerkasem, Charal Thong-Ngarn, Chawalit Korsamphan, Narit Yimyam and Benjavan Rerkasem | |||
23. Improvement of production and livelihood in the Fouta Djallon, Republique de Guinee | |||
I. Boiro, A.K. Barry, A. Diallo, S. Fofana, F. Mara, A. Balde, M.A. Kane and O. Barry | |||
22. Traditional forms of conserving biodiversity within agriculture: their changing character in Ghana. | |||
Edwin A. Gyasi | |||
PART IV - THE WAY FORWARD | |||
23. The message from People, Land Management and Environmental Change (PLEC) | |||
Harold Brookfield | |||
Back Matter (Contributors, Notes, References, Index) |