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Contributors
Emerald Davis is vice-chair of the Centre
for Attachment-based Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. As a psychotherapist,
her area of special interest is trauma and dissociation. She
is also involved in the work of the Institute of Psychotherapy
and Disability, developing access to psychotherapy for people
with learning disability.
Andrew
Enever is a psychoanalytic psychotherapist working
in private practice in Camden Town, London. He was secretary
of the Psychoanalytic & Psychodynamic section of the United
Kingdom Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP) from 2000 - 2002;
a member of the UKCP Governing Board from 2001-2006 and Chair
of the UKCP’s Registration Board From 2002-2006.
Angela
Greenfield works as a psychoanalytic psychotherapist
in private practice and also teaches on the Centre for Attachment-based
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy training course.
Jeremy
Holmes, MD FRCPsych., is visiting Professor of Psychological
Therapies at University of Exeter, UK, and the author of several
books including The Search for the Secure Base: Attachment
and Psychotherapy (Routledge 2001) and Oxford Textbook of
Psychotherapy (co-edited with G. Gabbard & J. Beck, Oxford
2005)
Will
McMahon is the Acting Director of the Crime and Society
Foundation, based at the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies,
King’s College London. He is Chair of the Care Leavers
Association.
Catherine
Mitson is vice-chair of the Clinical Training Committee
at The Centre for Attachment-based Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
and is a Course Tutor. She has a small private practice and
is particularly interested in trauma
Susie
Orbach is co-founder of The Women’s Therapy
Centre and The Women’s Therapy Centre Institute in New
York. She is visiting Professor at the London School of Economics.
She is an associate member of the Society of Couple Psychoanalytic
Psychotherapists. She is the author of many papers and books
on couple relationships.
Paul
Renn is psychoanalytic psychotherapist in private
practice in London. His background is in the probation service
where he specialised in assessing and working with high- and
very high-risk violent and sexual offenders from an attachment
theory and research perspective.
Joseph
Schwartz is a psychoanalytic psychotherapist working
in London. He is editor of ATTACHMENT. He did his post-doctoral
work in the Department of Psychiatry at the College of Physicians
and Surgeons of Columbia University in New York and holds
a Certificate in Psychodynamic Counseling from Birkbeck College,
London. His books include the award winning Einstein for Beginners
(with Michael McGuniness) and Cassandra’s Daughter:
A History of Psychoanalysis in Europe and America.
Valerie
Sinason is a poet, author and psychoanalyst, President
of the Institute for Psychotherapy and Disability and Director
of the Clinic for Dissociative Studies
Renee
Stafford was born and raised in Dublin before immigrating
to London in the mid-seventies. She works as a psychoanalytic
psychotherapist in private practice, also at the Medical Foundation
for the Care of Victims of Torture where her work has included
counseling, groupwork and administration.
Daniel
N. Stern is currently Professeur Honoraire in the
Faculté de Psychologie, Université de Genève,
Switzerland; Adjunct Professor in the Department of Psychiatry,
Cornell University Medical School - New York Hospital; and
Lecturer at the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalysis.
He is the author of six books including The Interpersonal
World of the Infant: A view from psychoanalysis and developmental
psychology, (Basic Books, 1985) and The Present Moment in
Psychotherapy and Everyday Life, (W.W. Norton, 2003). He is
the author of several hundred journal articles and chapters.
Kate White has used her past experience in
adult education in the training of nurses to inform her educational
work in psychotherapy which includes running workshops on
the themes of attachment and trauma in clinical practice.
Her most recent article is Developing a secure-enough base:
teaching psychotherapists in training the relationship between
attachment theory and clinical work. Attachment and Human
Development. v6,:pp.117-130, 2004. She has edited Unmasking
Race, Culture and Attachment in the Psychoanalytic Space;
What do we see? What do we think? What do we feel? (Karnac,
2006) and Touch: Attachment and the Body. (Karnac, 2004)
Rachel
Wingfield is Chair of the Centre for Attachment-based
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. She has specialised in working
with survivors of trauma and abuse, including sexual abuse,
rape, domestic violence, war, state terror, torture and organised
abuse. She is also a psychotherapist with the Clinic for Dissociative
Studies, which provides a cutting edge approach to working
with those labeled with personality disorders.
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