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  Catalogue of Journals All prices are shown in Australian Dollars 
 


International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work - subscribe for 2010 (For those who live outside of Australia)
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Description: If you’re interested in working with people in ways that:
  • are respectful and non-pathologising
  • bring forth people’s own skills and knowledges about their lives
  • are inspiring, hopeful, and energising

    then The International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work is for you!

    The International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work offers hopeful and creative ideas for counsellors, social workers, teachers, nurses, psychologists and community workers. In each issue, practitioners from a range of different countries discuss the ideas and practices that are inspiring them in their work, the dilemmas they are grappling with, and the issues most dear to their hearts. Published four times per year, a subscription to the International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work will ensure the latest ideas and practices are delivered to your door!

    USA, UK and NZ Subscribers: Subscriptions to the USA, UK and NZ are handled by our local distributors. If you live in the USA and would like to subscribe, please email: kenwoodtherapycenter@mac.com  If you live in the UK and would like to subscribe, please email:  mark@hayward.flyer.co.uk  If you live in New Zealand and would like to subscribe, please email: alastair@practicedevelopments.co.nz Thanks!

    Australian Subscribers: If you live in Australia, please purchase the subscription immediately below this listing! Thanks.

  • Price: AUD $93.00


    International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work - subscribe for 2010 (Those who live within Australia)
    This item must be shipped - costs will be added based on your location  
    Description: If you’re interested in working with people in ways that:
  • are respectful and non-pathologising
  • bring forth people’s own skills and knowledges about their lives
  • are inspiring, hopeful, and energising

    then The International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work is for you!

    This International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work offers hopeful and creative ideas for counsellors, social workers, teachers, nurses, psychologists and community workers. In each issue, practitioners from a range of different countries discuss the ideas and practices that are inspiring them in their work, the dilemmas they are grappling with, and the issues most dear to their hearts. Published four times per year, a subscription to the International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work will ensure the latest narrative ideas and practices are delivered to your door!

  • Price: AUD $77.00


    Latest issue: Border Crossings (2010 no 1)
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    Description:

    This issue begins with three practice-based papers, covering ways of responding to child abuse, externalising conversations about lateral violence in Aboriginal communties, and narrative approaches to supervision. The second part of the journal, 'Border crossings', explores the intersections of narrative practice with other approaches to working with individuals and families: family group conferencing, relaxation and guided imagery, and psychopharmacology. This issue provides a significant stretch to current thinking and practice in narrative therapy and community work.

    Price: AUD $22.00


    Making new home (2009 no 4)
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    Description:

    Part One of this issue includes three diverse practice-based exploring parent-teen conflict dissolution, using the Tree of Life methodology as a gateway to other maps of narrative practice, and therapeutic story writing. Part Two explores ideas of 'home' in Singapore, with refugees in New York, and with Brazillians living in Sydney. Finally, Marcela Polanco and David Epston offer tales of travels across languages.

    Price: AUD $22.00


    Add the complete 2009 set to your library - The International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work (For those who live outside of Australia)
    This item must be shipped - costs will be added based on your location  
    Description: If you missed out on subscribing in 2009, you can purchase the set here!
    Price: AUD $93.00


    Add the complete 2009 set to your library - The International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work (for those who live within Australia)
    This item must be shipped - costs will be added based on your location  
    Description:

    If you missed out on subscribing in 2009, you can purchase the set here!

    Price: AUD $77.00


    African-American Perspectives 2002 no 2
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    Description:

    This issue contains a wide range of papers, including an inspiring community research process, a profound oral history project, and a framework for post-colonial and culturally-appropriate therapy. The issue also includes two key articles on externalising and poststructuralism.

    This out-of-print journal is now available as a downloadable PDF.

    Price: AUD $17.50


    Challenging disabling practices
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    Description: This heartfelt collection of papers explores many different ways of talking about living and working with issues of disability. Powerful expressions of the experience and politics of disability sit alongside practical examples of ways of working.
    Price: AUD $13.20


    Child protection (2009 no 3)
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    Description:

    This issue offers new thinking and ideas for narrative practice in a range of areas that are close to our hearts.


    Part One includes papers on using narrative ideas in child protection and with people affected with intellectual disabilities. Part Two features two papers on using songs and songwriting in narrative practice, in varied settings. The final paper explores how to shape narrative therapy to fit local cultures.


    This is a thoughtful collection of creative papers!

    Price: AUD $22.00


    Children & young people: Dreams, responses & dilemmas
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    Description:

    Due to requests from readers, this issue focuses on ‘Children & young people: Dreams, responses and dilemmas’. The first paper, by Angel Yuen, proposes a ‘response-based narrative practice’ to assist children who have been subjected to trauma. The second, by Milan Colic, describes the use of narrative practices to explore the meaning of the dreams being experienced by a young person with whom he was working. And the third, by Jodi Aman, conveys ways in which narrative approaches can assist in linking families together when children/young people are going through difficult times. Two papers on the theme of ‘Eating issues’ follow. Ali Borden describes the work of the Eating Disorder Center of California. She conveys how narrative ideas can be used within a treatment centre to provide opportunities for the renegotiation of identity in group settings. Cari Corbet-Owen then provides a brief ‘exposé of body-worry’. The final section focuses on ‘Sharing dilemmas of practice’, with Chris Chapman and David Newman reflecting on their work with men who have been violent and/or abusive.

    Price: AUD $22.00


    Communities respond to HIV/AIDS, Diabetes & Grief
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    Description: This issue explores ways of working with communities that seek to facilitate unity in the face of potentially overwhelming problems. Two examples of these ways of working are explored: the work of Yvonne Sliep and the CARE Counsellors of Malawi, Africa, on issues of HIV/AIDS; and the work of the Aboriginal Women's Health and Healing Project of South Australia on issues of diabetes and grief.
    Price: AUD $11.00


    Community Practice 2003 #2
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    Description:

    How can narrative ideas be engaged with in work with communities of people? This issue responds to this question. Papers include: a description of the work of the Peer Counsellors of the Irish Wheelchair Association and the National Council for the Blind of Ireland; 'Narrative practice and community assignments', by Michael White: and a paper by Yvonne Sliep that describes emerging principles to assist community workers who are seeking to respond to vulnerable children in poverty-stricken environments. This journal also contains the paper 'Feminism, therapy and narrative ideas'.

    This out-of-print journal is now available as a downloadable PDF.

    Price: AUD $17.50


    Companions on a Journey: An exploration of an alternative community mental health project
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    Description: This journal describes the work of a group of people centred around the Dulwich Centre in Adelaide who were involved in creating an alternative Community Mental Health Project in an attempt to meet more adequately the needs of people with psychiatric diagnoses who are considered 'chronically' and mentally ill. Within the project, people who experience 'voices and visions' (often referred to as the auditory and visual hallucinations of schizophrenia) work together with community support workers to expose the tactics and effects of these 'voices and visions'; to honour and build upon individuals' knowledges and skills; to create ever-widening communities of reflection and support; and to question collaboratively the dominant ways of understanding and living in this culture.
    Price: AUD $13.20


    Complexity
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    Description: This journal issue explores realms of complexity in relation to working with women who have experienced sexual abuse; and the experiences of parents whose children are in care. Also included are ideas for counselling flyers that are congruent with narrative ideas. Three practice-based papers then follow: ‘Narrative therapy with young people: What externalising practice and use of letters make possible’, ‘Towards a ‘poethics’ of practice: Extending the relationship of ethics and aesthetics in narrative therapies through a consideration of the late work of Michel Foucault’ and 'Narrative practice with boys struggling with anorexia'.
    Price: AUD $17.50


    Considerations of Place
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    Description: This publication begins with a paper that provides an account of how the metaphor of 'therapist as host' can shape therapeutic practice. It then also focuses on 'Considerations of Place', inviting us to consider the significance of 'place' in the formation of identity, and reflects on this topic. There are also examples of outsider-witness practices and an article describing the 'Inside/Outside' program looking into the stories of those who are incarcerated. Within this journal you will also read about the mental health project. Last, but not least, an interview with Kiera Zen in East Timor.
    Price: AUD $17.50


    Creative narrative practice
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    Description:

    This journal is a collection of thoughtful and at times profound papers from England, South Africa, the USA, and Australia, all focussed on new directions in narrative practice.

    Part one includes papers about transforming a women's refuge to become a place of celebrating women's stories, as well as a piece on using cartoons in therapeutic practice.

    Part two includes two papers about working with older people in aged care home contexts, as well as using collective narrative documents as eulogies.

    Part three explores narrative practice in pastoral care contexts, while the final section includes a paper about working in a context of extreme self-harm.

    This issue is at once creative, challenging, and hopeful.

    Price: AUD $22.00


    Crisis and Community
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    Description: Over the years, we have often received requests for articles about how narrative therapy ideas can be applied to crisis work. The first section of this issue comprises of two papers on this theme. The first, by Elizabeth Buckley and Philip Decter, offers a narrative and anthropological framework for working with children and families in crisis. The second paper, by Manja Visschedijk, explores the ways in which narrative ideas can be helpful for managers in responding to ‘crisis’ situations. The second section of this journal issue describes an approach to community work informed by narrative ideas that we hope will be of relevance to practitioners in a wide range of contexts. Over the last year, a number of Aboriginal communities, which are experiencing hard times, have been exchanging stories. These are stories about special skills, special knowledge, about hopes and dreams and the ways that people are holding onto these. They are stories that honour history. This article describes the thinking that has informed this process. It also contains extracts of stories and messages from different communities. The third section of this journal consists of two further practice-based papers. Judith Milner recounts the story of how a group of parents, who were caring for children whose behaviour had been sexually concerning or harmful, transformed their lives and, in the process, transformed a service. And David Epston, Cherelyn Lakusta and Karl Tomm describe a novel approach to parent-children conflicts. 
    Price: AUD $17.50


    Eating issues, transgender journeys and narrative practice
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    Description: In this journal issue: Eileen Hurley describes her use of narrative documents in work with young men in a US jail. Maksuda Begum conveys stories of her work in Dhaka, Bangladesh, in which she speaks with children with disabilities and their mothers. An alternative intake questionnaire informed by narrative ideas, which was developed by David Denborough in collaboration with Maksuda Begum, is also included. Due to requests from readers, we have then included two papers about the use of narrative practices in responding to eating issues. Shona Russell describes ways in which narrative conversations can contribute to a deconstruction of perfectionism, while Tracy Craggs and Alex Reed provide a novel account of therapy for anorexia. The final section of this issue consists of four papers which focus on transgender experience and possibilities for practice.
    Price: AUD $22.00


    Experience Consultants
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    Description: This special issue contains papers related to the theme ‘Experience Consultants’, and each paper in the first section of this journal has been written by those with insider knowledge of particularly complex experiences. These include experiences of growing up with a parent with serious mental healtrh concerns; the story of a therapist who herself experienced psychosis; stories from the Romany people about ways of generating culturally appropriate practice; a story from a young Australian woman who was adopted from Vietnam and has developed unique ways of understanding issue of culture and belonging; and insider knowledge about diverse experiences of gender and sexual identities. To complete this issue, we have included two papers on the theme of re-thinking formal clinical paperwork and assessment. William Madsen offers a range of ideas and suggestions as to ways of working within traditional structures that support a collaborative clinical practice. While Mim Weber explores constraints, dilemmas and opportunities in relation to ways in which narrative ideas can inform assessment processes in relation to ‘eating disorders’.
    Price: AUD $22.00


    Folk Psychology and Narrative Practice by Michael White
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    Description: This edition consists of a paper by Michael White entitled Folk Psychology and Narrative Practice. Within it, many of the practices of narrative therapy are linked to an historical tradition of understanding life and identity that is at times referred to as 'folk psychology'. Consisting of descriptions of a range of therapeutic conversations, as well as rigorous considerations of ideas, history and culture, this paper represents a considerable contribution to the field of narrative therapy.
    Price: AUD $14.00


    History and Practice
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    Description:

    This issue includes: five accessible and thorough practice-based papers detailing the use of outsider-witnesses in narrative therapy; school counselling practices; working with people who are struggling with problems of substance use; and ways of destabilising the habits of highly effective problems. The second section contains thoughtful interviews relating to history and healing. Two of these were conducted in South Africa and relate to ways in which Apartheid and Holocaust histories are being engaged with to contribute to healing in the present. The third describes the inspiring work of the Lesbian Herstory Archives in New York City. The final section, entitled 'Voices from Bali' has been created as a response to the bombing that took place there in 2002.

    This out-of-print journal is now available as a downloadable PDF.

    Price: AUD $17.50


    Homelessness
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    Description: In this publication a variety of papers from Australia, Brasil, North America and South Africa, explore the experience and politics of homelessness. Practice-based papers also describe a variety of projects and ways of working with the complexity of this issue. This journal features the last interview given by Paulo Freire.
    Price: AUD $16.50


    Innovative approaches to working with young people
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    Description:

    This groundbreaking issue contains four diverse sections:

    • Innovative approaches to working with young people
    • Palestinian and Indian narrative practice
    • Narrative explorations in clinical health psychology
    • Talking about sex and sexual identity

    The topics are wide-ranging and likewise span work across the globe. From hopeful work with Palestinian ex-detainees and narrative approaches with a young girl in India, to work combining cultural studies theory and narrative practice with Harry Potter and Grand Theft Auto ... this issue also looks at ways to use fiction-writing in contexts of grief, narrative work in clinical health psychology environments, and polyamory and 'sex addiction'.

    If you're looking for stretches in narrative thinking and practice from around the world, this is a great place to start!

    Price: AUD $22.00


    Living Positive Lives: A gathering for people with an HIV positive diagnosis
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    Description: This publication tells the story of a gathering for people with an HIV positive diagnosis and workers from the HIV sector. Within these pages are recorded the stories that were told and the skills and knowledges about living with HIV which were articulated. This document has also been deliberately written in such a way as to convey how the weekend was structured by narrative ideas through the use of prior consultative interviews, a gathering program, and the use of definitional ceremonies and outsider witness practices. A number of reflections from Australia and South Africa are also included.
    Price: AUD $14.00


    Love
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    Description: This special issue focuses on the theme of ‘love’. Includes: the use of narrative practices in deconstructing jealousy; in working with male partners of women who have experienced childhood sexual abuse; and in examining and deconstructing how certain philosophies of love are influencing couple relationships. These pieces also consider how children respond to family tragedies; ways of assisting parents to reclaim their knowledge and pride in their children’s differences; and how to assist therapists to respond to the confusion that some women who have been subject to childhood sexual abuse experience in relation to understandings of love.
    Price: AUD $17.50


    Mental health and families
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    Description:

    This issue both expands our thinking about how narrative ideas can be applied, as well as reporting on two projects initiated by Dulwich Centre.

    Part One of the journal features three papers on mental health and families: 'Children, parents, and mental health' by Dulwich Centre; 'Growing up with parents with mental health difficulties' by Ruth Pluznick and Natasha Kis-Sines; and 'When your child is diagnosed with schizophrenia: The skills and knowledges of parents' by Amanda Worrall.

    Part Two, 'Alternative assessments: Looking for subordinate stories' features the article 'Narrative approaches in Centrelink: "It's those turning questions . . ."' by Lesley Dalyell.

    Finally, Part Three documents Dulwich Centre's 'Women and Grief' Project, which features contributions from around the world.

    In all, this issue is both profound and moving in its content, as well as stimulating and rigorous in its application of ideas in new ways and contexts - showing that, as narrative practice is engaged with around the world, the ideas are being taken up in innovative and generative ways.

    Price: AUD $22.00


    Narrative sex therapy
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    Description: This issue of the International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work features what we believe will be an influential paper by Yael Gershoni, Saviona Cramer and Tali Gogol-Ostrowsky entitled: ‘Narrative sex therapy: Talking with heterosexual couples about sex, bodies, and relationships’. The first section of this journal issue also includes a paper titled: Using the ‘failure conversations map’ with couples experiencing fertility problems. The second section of the journal focuses on a key aspect of narrative practice: an ethic of circulation. This relates to ways in which therapists and community workers can document and circulate the skills and knowledge that people are using to address difficulties in their lives. Three papers are included here. The third section of the journal includes two thoughtful papers which explore how research can influence practice. One of these relates to the meanings of sexualised coercion and gender in psychosocial group sessions for women. The other undertakes conversational analysis of externalising conversations. This diverse journal issue includes papers from Canada, Israel, Australia, Denmark and England.
    Price: AUD $22.00


    Narrative Therapy & Community Work: A conference collection
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    Description: This journal represents a range of workshops, presentations and conversations that took place at the second Dulwich Centre Publications' Narrative Therapy and Community Work Conference in Adelaide in February 2000. From practice-based seminar papers, to keynote addresses on 'Reconciliation' and 'Spirituality', this collection contains a diversity of thoughtful and inspiring writings.
    Price: AUD $27.50


    Narrative Therapy and Research
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    Description: Includes a diverse collection of papers relating to narrative therapy and research. Also includes papers that: question how attitudes to women’s sexuality influence women who have been subjected to sexual assault; proposals for using narrative maps of practice to assist people in changing their relationships to substances; a letter discussing transsexual/transgendered experience; and the write-up of a recent gathering on Robben Island, South Africa, in which participants came together to try to find ways to contribute towards the healing of histories of trauma that have occurred in their respective countries.
    Price: AUD $17.50


    New perspectives on ‘addiction’
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    Description: This edition aims to take some small steps towards creating new conversations about ways of working with people experiencing problems related to alcohol, other drugs and gambling. Through a series of articles, interviews and reviews, practical ideas for ways of working are offered and the broader social and historical context of the work is discussed.
    Price: AUD $24.20


    New Voices
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    Description: This journal issue consists of papers from authors never previously published who are doing innovative work. The first paper, by Anne Kathrine Løge from Norway, introduces an approach to working with divorced parents to ‘disarm the conflict’ and assist them in developing skills of collaboration in relation to parenting their children. The second piece, by Ron Nasim from Israel, describes innovative group work in a psychiatric day clinic. The second section of the journal consists of two papers about ways of working with queer folk from religious backgrounds. The third part of this edition features   the hopeful work of two organisations, one Israeli, one Palestinian, which are dedicated to finding a way out of the cycles of violence in that part of the world. Finally, the focus turns to Africa, and more particularly to Rwanda. It is now almost thirteen years since the genocide took place in Rwanda. We think readers will be moved to hear of the work of organisations which are supporting survivors and continuing to seek justice.
    Price: AUD $22.00


    'Normality', the written word & teaching narrative practice
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    Description: Interested in learning or teaching narrative therapy practice? This special issue is a response to the many requests we receive for examples of ‘teaching exercises’ related to narrative therapy. These requests come not only from teachers but also from practitioners who are wanting further ways of improving their skills and/or ways of exploring narrative practices with colleagues. This issue includes exercises from Russia, USA, Australia and Canada. The journal also includes a lead paper, ‘Turning the spotlight back on the normalizing gaze’, by Jane Hutton and Kate Knapp. This is a delightful exploration of how conversations about normality and failure can lead in unexpected directions. The paper also describes a partnership between a therapist and visual artist. The second section of this journal issue features two papers on the use of the written word in therapeutic consultations. Many Pentecost, from New Zealand, describes four different genres of writing used within counselling. The article itself is written in the form of the letter to the person consulting her. The paper following, by Adam Hahs, describes the use of greeting cards as therapeutic documents. The journal is completed by the announcement of an exciting new project: ‘the found in translation project’. If you work in languages other than English or in bi-lingual or multicultural contexts you may be interested in participating in what promises to be a lively and generative international conversation.

    Price: AUD $22.00


    Professional sexual abuse
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    Description: This special double issue focuses on the subject of sexual misconduct by professionals. The papers included both individually and collectively focus our attention on the multiple roles of the professional: as sexual abuser, as complicit bystander, as witness, advocate, teacher, healer, activist. They serve to remind us of the choices available to us, and to encourage us to 'assume moral and ethical responsibility for the effects our interactions have on others.
    Price: AUD $11.00


    Psychiatry and Narrative Ideas
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    Description: This issue contains papers around a number of themes, first of all ‘Psychiatry and narrative ideas’. We’re pleased to include here the first of a series of papers by psychiatrist SuEllen Hamkins in which she explores the use of narrative practices within her psychiatric practice. Other sections of the journal include 'Stories from working with men', ‘Stories from working with women’, and a paper that throws into question issues of gender and sexual identity!  

    Price: AUD $17.50


    Reclaiming our stories, reclaiming our lives - responding to Aboriginal deaths in custody
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    Description: This publication outlines a report of a counselling project initiated by the Aboriginal Health Council of South Australia. This counselling project implemented one of the recommendations made by the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody.
    Price: AUD $11.00


    Reflecting teams edition - Gecko
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    Description:

    This issue of Gecko: A Journal of Deconstruction and Narrative Ideas in Therapeutic Practice features articles exploring the use of reflecting teams in narrative therapy. This issue contains Michael White's article 'Reflecting teamwork as definitional ceremony revisited'.

    Price: AUD $17.50


    Responding to Trauma: Part One
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    Description: Since the events of September 11th in the USA, the field of ‘trauma work’ has grown exponentially. This increased interest in these matters seems to offer many possibilities as well as a range of hazards! There is so much to consider. The papers included here describe hopeful and creative work in responding to trauma. These include papers from Sri Lanka in relation to the tsunami, Australia, Israel, Uganda, Burundi, East Congo and Gaza (Palestinian Territories). We’ve also included two papers relating to work with children, one from Bangladesh and one from Australia.
    Price: AUD $17.50


    Responding to Violence 2006 #4
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    Description: Finding ways to respond to those who have enacted violence and abuse against others has long been a challenge to the field of family therapy and community work - and it continues to be. This journal issue explores some of these challenges.

    Price: AUD $17.50


    Schooling & education: Exploring new possibilities
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    Description: This edition emerged from a desire to explore new ways of thinking about education and schooling. The articles included raise a variety of challenging questions and provide some practical and exciting possibilities for action. Questions considered include: Given that schooling plays such a large role in the lives of children and their parents, what implications does an understanding of the dynamics of educational practice have for therapists, counsellors and social workers in their work with families? What are the effects of current practices on individual children, on parents, families, and on whole communities? How does schooling fit into the larger structures of class, race, gender and sexuality? What difference would it make if we applied an ethic of care to our thinking about education? How do concepts of accountability relate to adults' relationships with young people, both inside and outside of school?
    Price: AUD $24.20


    Social Justice & family therapy (Just therapy)
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    Description: In this publication, we take up the difficult issue of social justice and family therapy - not only how those who are socially disadvantaged can gain access to therapy, but also how that therapy comes to grips with the economic and political realities which so often underlie the distress which individuals and families experience. This journal features the work of the 'Just Therapy Team' of Wellington, New Zealand.
    Price: AUD $11.00


    Some thoughts on men’s ways of being
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    Description: A hopeful, moving and thoughtful collection of papers by men and women examining matters of masculinity and gender and their relevance to the realm of therapy.
    Price: AUD $17.50


    Speaking out and being heard - a therapeutic gathering
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    Description: This publication documents the voices of mental health consumers and carers who took part in a joint project that was organised by a group of mental health consumers, carers, the South Australian Council of Social Services, and Dulwich Centre. Includes stories from the gathering; descriptions of participants' skills and knowledges; reflections from listening group members; and a summary of recommendations from consumers and carers which they see as necessary within the mental health system.
    Price: AUD $11.00


    Special issue in memory of Michael White
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    Description: This special issue includes a piece of writing by John Winslade and Lorraine Hedtke who were present at Michael White’s final workshop in San Diego. They were with Michael when he suffered a heart attack at a restaurant in the evening after this workshop, and they played significant roles in caring for friends and family from this moment until Michael died in a San Diego hospital a few days later. This memorial piece is introduced by David Epston.

    This special issue also includes a very rich diversity of thoughtful, practice-based papers. The first of these, by Yishai Shalif and Rachel Paran, describes work they conducted in bomb shelters in Northern Israel during military conflict. The next section of the journal features two articles focusing on a complex area of work – responding to young men who have engaged in sexually abusive actions. In the third section of the journal, Deidre Ikin conveys stories of her work with people wishing to make changes to drug and alcohol use. This paper includes a document created by a mother whose child had been removed from her care. The next paper to be included is by Kath Reid. Drawing on notions of ‘family as a verb’, her paper documents the work of a Queer Families project, which seeks to co-explore and richly-describe diverse meanings of ‘family’.

    Price: AUD $22.00


    Stories from Hong Kong
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    Description: This special issue focuses on stories from Hong Kong where there is a vibrant community of narrative practitioners. Papers illustrate group work with young women dealing with mental health issues; consultations with people in relation to drug use and addiction; group work in relation to overcoming the effects of child-sexual abuse; and consultation with children and young people. The second half of this journal features a thorough practice-based paper by Michael White entitled, 'Working with people who are suffering the consequences of multiple trauma: a narrative perspective'.
    Price: AUD $17.50


    Taking the hassle out of school - and stories from younger people
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    Description: The first section of this publication describes the exciting work of the Ani-Harassment Team of Selwyn College in Auckland, New Zealand. The second section of this publication describes other creative work happening in schools, including work on 'interviewing racism', 'questioning teasing and self-doubt' as well as work related to marijuana use, family conferencing and ways of reclaiming culture and community. The final section features the voices of younger people and their compelling stories of survival, partnership and challenging youth despair.
    Price: AUD $24.20


    Talking About Families
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    Description: This journal explores four different themes in relation to families. The first grapples with the complexity of engaging with family histories across generations when dispossession and injustice is a part of these histories. The second consists of moving and thoughtful accounts by counsellors about how legacies from their families of origin in relation to mental health issues have led to creative developments in their own work. The third sheds new light on the experience of refugee families and poses many questions in relation to how we as health professionals can respond to those who have to flee their countries and leave their homes and family members behind them. And the final theme conveys some of the delights, struggles and learnings involved in creating gay and lesbian, anti-nuclear families. In the process, these stories offer new perspectives on relationships and the making of family that have widespread implications. This collection of papers will be of relevance to anyone working with families - in all their diversity.
    Price: AUD $14.00


    Teaching and Supervision
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    Description: This issue focuses on Teaching and Supervision. In this publication, practitioners and teachers from Australia, New Zealand, Mexico, Israel, the USA, Norway and England discuss the aspects of supervision and teaching narrative ideas that are bringing them the most challenge and delight. This issue also contains a practice-based papers on externalising conversations with children, and the use of journey metaphors within therapy, teaching and community work contexts. Two inspiring interviews from South Africa explore the broader meaning of education.
    Price: AUD $17.50


    The question of forgiveness 2002 no 1
    This item can be downloaded once purchased.  
    Description:

    This first issue of The International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work is devoted to exploring the concept of 'forgiveness'. It covers a wide range of topics, including sexual abuse, terrorism, racism, prisons, and deathbed rituals. This diverse collection is thought-provoking and provides a stretch for thinking about narrative therapy and community work.

    This out-of-print journal is now available as a downloadable PDF.

    Price: AUD $17.50


    Working on issues of abuse and violence
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    Description: This journal consists of a diversity of papers all of which consider issues related to violence and abuse. Survivors of violence write of their resilience and how they will be silent no more. Practice-based papers describe their work with men who have experienced child sexual abuse, and workshops in schools designed to address issues of homophobia. A number of interviews explore areas of complexity including - how to work with the interface of domestic violence and child protection; how to engage and work with the mothers of sons who have perpetrated abuse; and how to talk about domestic violence in diverse cultural communities. Two further interviews are included as part of exploring the broader context of this work. One concerns the work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and its attempts to address histories of violence in South Africa. The other, with the Just Therapy Team from Wellington New Zealand, builds upon their previous writings about partnerships of accountability.
    Price: AUD $13.75


    Young people
    This item must be shipped - costs will be added based on your location  
    Description: This particular journal issue contains papers by authors from Zimbabwe, Australia, Hong Kong, the UK, USA and New Zealand. We are delighted to include a lead paper by Ncazelo Ncube (Zimbabwe/South Africa) about creative and inspiring work with vulnerable children in Southern Africa. How can the lives of children who have experienced significant losses be responded to in ways that are not re-traumatising and that bring to light children's own skills and knowledge? What sorts of exercises can be used in camps for vulnerable children? How can children be provided with significant experiences that do not separate them from their families, values and cultural norms? This paper describes a creative exercise informed by narrative therapy principles and practices. This is then followed by a range of papers offering practical ideas about ways of working with young people. There are also powerfully moving accounts of the skills and knowledge of young people in dealing with hard times.
    Price: AUD $17.50
     
     

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