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30th July 2010
Contents listing of all issues
Volume 1, Numbers 1 & 2: Winter 2002 To read the editorial of this issue, click here • The United Colors of Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapies – Germain Lietaer (pp. 4–13) • Theoretical Propositions in Regard to Self Theory within Person-Centered Therapy – Dave Mearns (pp. 14–27) • Aspects of the Actualizing Tendency from a Humanistic Psychology Perspective – Jobst Finke (pp. 28–40) • The Valuing Process and the Inner Critic in the Classic and Current Client-Centered/Experiential Literature – Nele Stinckens, Germain Lietaer and Mia Leijssen (pp. 41–55) • Knowledge or Acknowledgement? Psychotherapy as 'The Art of Not-knowing' — Prospects on further developments of a radical paradigm – Peter F. Schmid (pp. 56–70) • Therapeutic Presence: Therapists' experience of presence in the psychotherapy encounter – Shari Geller and Leslie Greenberg (pp. 71–86) • Research Policy and Practice in Person-Centered and Experiential Therapy: Restoring coherence – John McLeod (pp. 87–101) • Render unto Caesar: Quantitative and qualitative knowing in research on humanistic therapies – Robert Elliott (pp. 102–17) • Where Did We Come From and Where Are We Going? The development of person-centered psychotherapy – Hans Swildens (pp. 118–31) • The Future of Person-Centered Therapy: Crisis and possibility – Martin Van Kalmthout (pp. 132–43) • The Helping Conditions in Their Context: Expanding change theory and practice – Godfrey T. Barrett-Lennard (pp. 144–55) Volume 2, Number 1: Spring 2003 To read the editorial of this issue, click here • Development and Current State of the Research on Client-Centered Therapy in the German Language Region • Jochen Eckert, Diether Hoger and Reinhold Schwab (pp. 3–18) • An Exploration into the Client at the Heart of Therapy: A qualitative perspective – Brian Rogers (pp. 19–30) • Eugene Gendlin’s Theory and Practice of Psychotherapy, A Personal Account – Neil Friedman (pp. 31–42) • Between Freedom and Despair: Existential challenges and contributions to person-centered and experiential therapy – Mick Cooper (pp. 43–56) • Book Review Essay: Encountering Carl Rogers — 15 years after his death – Howard Kirschenbaum (pp. 57–66) • Book Reviews Client-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapy in the 21st Century: Advances in theory, research and practice. Selected papers from the fifth ICCCEP conference, Chicago, 2000 edited by J.C. Watson, R.N. Goldman and M.S. Warner Reviewed by Godfrey T. Barrett-Lennard (pp. 67–70) Dictionary of Person-Centred Psychology. Tony Merry and Keith Tudor Reviewed by Pete Sanders (pp. 70–1) Volume 2, Number 2: Summer 2003 To read the editorial of this issue, click here • Organism and Subjectivity: 1. The concept of ‘organism’ and ‘actualizing tendency’ – Hermann Spielhofer (pp. 75–88) • Interactive Resonance in Work with Children and Adolescents: A theory-based concept of interpersonal relationship through play and the use of toys – Michael Behr (pp. 89–103) • The Characteristics of a Person-Centered Approach to Therapy and Counseling: Criteria for identity and coherence – Peter F Schmid (pp. 104–20) • Small is Beautiful: Small-scale phenomenological research for counsellor self-development – Richard Worsley (pp. 121–32) • Book Review Essay. Inspiriting the Practice of Therapy: A passionate call for professional and social renewal. A reveiw of Brian Thorne, The Mystical Power of Person-Centred Therapy: Hope beyond despair – Gay Leah Swenson Barfield (pp. 133–40) • Book Reviews Carl Rogers and the Person-Centered Approach VHS Video produced by H. Kirschenbaum. Reviewed by Brian Thorne (pp. 141–5) Skills in Person-Centred Counselling and Psychotherapy Janet Tolan Reviewed by Paul Wilkins (pp. 145–6) Volume 2, Number 3: Autumn 2003 To read the editorial of this issue, click here • The Art of Psychological Contact: The psychotherapy of a mentally retarded psychotic client – Barbara Krietemeyer and Garry Prouty (pp. 151–61) • Empathy: The adventure of being present – Claudio Rud (pp. 162–71) • Assessment in Person-Centered Therapy – Paul Wilkins and Martin Gill (pp. 172–87) • Professional Characteristics of Humanist Therapists: Analyses of the collaborative research network sample – Robert Elliott, David Orlinsky, Melissa Klein, Mona Amer and Rhea Partyka (pp. 188–203) • Hypnocounseling: Carl Rogers and Milton Erickson – Hugh Gunnison and Suzanne Moore (pp. 204–18) • Book Reviews Die vielen Gesichter der Personzentrierten Psychotherapie [The Many Faces of Person-Centered Psychotherapy] Wolfgang Keil and Gerhard Stumm Reviewed by Brian Thorne (pp. 219–21) Volume 2, Number 4: Winter 2003 To read the editorial of this issue, click here • Person-Centered Therapy as a Research-Informed Approach: Evidence and possibilities – Ladislav Timulak (pp. 227–41) • Can Carl Rogers Teach Us Anything about Interpretation? – Nicola Gazzola and Anastassios Stalikas (pp. 242–7) • Becoming Whole: A collaboration between experiential psychotherapies and mindfulness mediation – Shari M Geller (pp. 248–73) • Carl Rogers in the Therapy Room: A listing of session transcripts and a survey of publications referring Rogers’ sessions – Germain Lietaer and Barbara T Brodley (pp. 274–91) • Book Reviews The Client-Centred Therapist in Psychiatric Contexts: A therapists’ guide to the psychiatric landscape and its inhabitants Lisbeth Sommerbeck Reviewed by Margaret S. Warner (pp. 292–4) Klienten/Personzentrierte Psychotherapie: Kontexte, Konzepte, Konkretisierungen [Client/Person-Centered Psychotherapy: Contexts, Concepts, Concrete Forms] edited by Peter Frenzel, Wolfgang w. Keil, Peter F. Schmid and Norbert Stφlz Reviewed by Christian Fehringer (pp. 294–6) Volume 3, Number 1: Spring 2004 Special Issue: Process Differentiation and Person-Centeredness Prozessdifferenzierung und Personzentrierung Diferenciaciσn de Proceso y Cualidad Centrada en la Persona Keynote Lectures from the 6th World Conference for Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapy and Counseling Guest Editors – Roelf J. Takens and Germain Lietaer To read the introduction to this issue, click here • Process Differentiation and Person-Centeredness: Introduction to the Special Issue – Roelf J Takens and Germain Lietaer (pp. 1–3) • Self-Pathology and Postmodern Humanity: Challenges for person-centered psychotherapy – Hans Swildens (pp. 4–18) • From Client-Centered to Clarification-Oriented Psychotherapy – Rainer Sachse (pp. 19–35) • Back to the Client: A phenomenological approach to the process of understanding and diagnosis – Peter F Schmid (pp. 36–51) • Being and Doing: Person-centeredness, process guidance and differential treatment – Leslie S Greenberg (pp. 52–64) • Book Reviews Existential Therapies Mick Cooper Reviewed by Gerhard Stumm (pp. 65–7) Identitδt – Begegnumg – Kooperation: Person-/Klientenzentrierte Psychotherapie und Beratung an der Jahrhundertwende edited by Catherine Iseli, Wolfgang W. Keil, Lore Korbei, Nora Nemeskeri, Silvia Rasch-Oswald, Peter F. Schmid and Paulus G Wacker Reviewed by Hermann Spielhofer (pp. 68–70) Problem Drinking: A person-centred dialogue Reviewed by Peter Schlebusch (pp. 70–2) Volume 3, Number 2: Summer 2004 Papers from the 6th World Conference for Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapy and Counseling Vortrδge vom 6. Weltkongress fόr Personzentrierti und Experienzielle Psychotherapie und Beratung Artνculos de la 6ta conferencia mundial de psicoterapia y orientaciσn centradas en la persona y experienciales To read the editorial of this issue, click here • Process Differentiation and Person-Centeredness: A contradiction? – Roelf J Takens and Germain Lietaer (pp. 77–87) • Problem-Centered is not Person-Centered – Dave Mearns (pp. 88–101) • How Do Clients Make Empathy Work? – Arthur C Bohart (pp. 102–16) • Letting Go of Who I Think I Am: Listening to the unconditioned self – Judy Moore (pp. 117–28) • Space Differentiation in Experiential Psychotherapy – Frans Depestele (pp. 129–39) • Book Reviews Hypnocounseling: An eclectic bridge between Milton Erickson and Carl Rogers Hugh Gunnison Reviewed by James R. Iberg (pp. 140–3) Counselling a Survivor of Child Sexual Abuse: A person-centred dialogue Richard Bryant-Jefferies Reviewed by Judy Moore (pp. 143–6) Volume 3, Number 3: Autumn 2004 Papers from the 6th World Conference for Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapy and Counseling Vortrδge vom 6. Weltkongress fόr Personzentrierti und Experienzielle Psychotherapie und Beratung Artνculos de la 6ta conferencia mundial de psicoterapia y orientaciσn centradas en la persona y experienciales To view the editorial of this issue, click here • The Imperative of Ethical Justification in Psychotherapy: The special case of client-centered therapy – Barry Grant (pp. 152–65) • Diagnosing Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapy: An analysis of the PCE 2003 programming – Jeffrey H Cornelius-White and Cecily F Cornelius-White (pp. 166–75) • Developing Self-Pluralistic Perspectives Within the Person-Centered and Experiential Approaches: A round-table dialogue – Mick Cooper, Dave Mearns, William B Stiles, Margaret Warner and Robert Elliott (pp. 176–91) • Person-Centered Psychotherapy as a Modern System of Meaning – Martin Van Kalmthout (pp. 192–206) • Book Review Essay. Reflections of an Honorable Man – Jerold D Bozarth (pp. 207–14) • Book Reviews Freedom to Practise: Person-centred approaches to supervision edited by Keith Tudor and Mike Worrall Reviewed by Elke Lambers (pp. 215–18) • Obituaries. Tony Merry, 1948–2004; John K Wood, 1934–2004 Volume 3, Number 4: Winter 2004 To read the editorial of this issue, click here • Editorial (pp. 225–7) • The Dialog with the Inner Critic: From a pluralistic self to client-centered and experiential work with partial egos – Susanne Vahrenkamp and Michael Behr (pp. 228–44) • Differential Response, Diagnosis, and the Philosophy of the Implicit – Campbell Purton (pp. 245–55) • Past, Present and Future of the Person-Centered Approach in Greece – Andreas Brouzos and Grigoris Mouladoudis (pp. 256–67) • Maintain and Enhance: An integrative view of person-centered and process-differentiated diagnostics – Jeffrey HD Cornelius-White (pp. 268–76) • Trauma, Imagery and Focusing – Ton Coffeng (pp. 277–90) • Non-linear Dynamic Systems and the Non-directive Attitude in Client-Centered Therapy – Lisbeth Sommerbeck (pp. 291–9) Volume 4, Number 1: Spring 2005 To read the editorial of this issue, click here • Editorial (pp. 1–3) • The Integration of Focusing-Oriented Psychotherapy into the Three-phase Model for the Treatment of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder – Peter Scharwδchter (pp. 4–19) • Working in Forensic Services in a Person-centered Way – Gillian Proctor (pp. 20–30) • Carl Rogers and Eugene Gendlin on the Bodily Felt Sense: What they share and where they differ – Akira Ikemi (pp. 31–42) • Process Differentiation by Space Differentiation in Experiential Psychotherapy – Frans Depestele (pp. 43–53) • The Inter-experiential Field: Perceptions and metaperceptions in person-centered and experiential psychotherapy – Mick Cooper (pp. 54–68) • Book Reviews (pp. 69–72) Grundbegriffe der Personzentrierten und Focusing-orientierten Psychotherapie und Beratung edited by Gerhard Stumm, Johannes Wiltschko and Wolfgang W. Keil Reviewed by Lore Korbei and Joachim Sauer Idiosyncratic Person-centred Therapy: From the personal to the universal edited by Suzanne Keys Reviewed by Christiane Geiser Volume 4, Number 2: Summer 2005 To read the editorial of this issue, click here To read the obituary for Laura North Rice, click here • Editorial: Reinforce or Challenge? (pp. 75–6) • Rogers' Interviews with Gloria and Kathy Revisited: A micro-analysis of the client–therapist interaction – Roelf J Takens (pp. 77–89) • The Therapy of Dissociation: Its phases and problems – Ton Coffeng (pp. 90–105) • The Person-Centered Approach from an Existential Perspective – Gerhard Stumm (pp. 106–23) • Review Essay: In its Awakening 'Cultural' Awareness the Person-Centered Approach Needs to Consider More Than Just Racism: A review of R Moodley, C Lago and A Talahite (eds) Carl Rogers Counsels a Black Client – TL Holdstock (pp. 124–30) • Obituary: Laura N Rice (pp. 131–3) • Bibliographies (compiled by Peter F Schmid) of the publications of: Laura N Rice (pp. 133–5) Tony Merry (pp. 136–9) John K Wood (pp. 140–4) • Book Reviews The Person-Centred Approach to Therapeutic Change by Michael McMillan. Reviewed by Campbell Purton (pp. 145–6) Learning Emotion-Focused Therapy: The Process-Experiential approach to change by Robert Elliott, Jeanne C Watson, Rhonda N Goldman and Leslie S Greenberg. Reviewed by Germain Lietaer (pp. 147–9) Volume 4, Numbers 3&4: Autumn/Winter 2005 (double issue) To read the editorial of this issue, click here • Editorial: Thinking Need Not Oppose Feeling (pp. 151–3) • The Carl Rogers Bibliography of English and German Sources—Compiled by Peter F. Schmid • Introductions (pp. 154–7) • Sources (pp. 158–60) • Key to abbreviations • Chronological bibliography of writings (pp. 161–221) • Chronological bibliography of films (pp. 221–9) • Alphabetical index of names (pp. 229–39) • Alphabetical index of titles (pp. 239–67) Volume 5, Number 1: Spring 2006 To read the editorial of this issue, click here • Editorial: Potsdam and Beyond • Toward an Integrated Person-Centered Theory of Wellness and Psychopathology — Margaret S. Warner (pp. 4–20) • Person-Centered Counseling for Alcohol-Related Problems: The Client’s Experience of Self in the Therapeutic Relationship — Marijke Moerman and John McLeod (pp. 21–35) • Non-directivity in Client-Centered Therapy — Barbara Temaner Brodley (pp. 36–52) • Linguistic Characteristics of the Different Spaces of Experiential Psychotherapy — Frans Depestele (pp. 53–65) • Book Reviews Encountering Feminism: Intersections between feminism and the person-centred approach by Gillian Proctor and Mary Beth Napier (Eds.). Reviewed by Suzanne Keys (pp. 66–8) Steps on a Mindful Journey: Person-centred expressions by Godfrey T. Barrett-Lennard. Reviewed by Germain Lietaer (pp. 69–70) Psychology for the Other: Levinas, ethics and the practice of psychology by E. E. Gantt and R. N. Williams (Eds.) Reviewed by Jan van Blarikom (pp. 70–3) Person-Centred Therapy: The focusing-oriented approach by Campbell Purton. Reviewed by Frans Depestele (pp. 73–4) The Person-Centred Approach: A contemporary introduction by Louise Embleton Tudor, Keemar Keemar, Keith Tudor, Joanna Valentine and Mike Worrall. Reviewed by Brian Thorne (pp. 75–7) Volume 5, Number 2: Summer 2006 To read the editorial of this issue, click here • Editorial: Building Theory and Research across Languages and Cultures (pp. 79–80) • Doing Research on the Effectiveness of Psychotherapy and Psychotherapy Training: A person-centered/experiential perspective – Robert Elliott and Alberto Zucconi (pp. 81–100) • The New Integral Multidisciplinary Guidelines in the Netherlands: The perspective of person-centered psychotherapy – Giel J.M. Hutschemaekers and Martin van Kalmthout (pp. 101–13) • Radical Reflexivity: Rationale for an experiential person-centered approach to counseling and psychotherapy – David L. Rennie (pp. 114–26) • Sensory Awareness as a Method of Mindfulness Training within the Perspective of Person-Centered Psychotherapy – Michael M. Tophoff (pp. 127–37) • Understanding Person-Centered Therapy: A review of Paul Wilkins' Person-Centred Therapy in Focus – Arthur C. Bohart (pp. 138–143) • Book Reviews Contributions to Client-Centered Therapy and the Person-Centered Approach by Nathaniel J. Raskin. Reviewed by Barry Grant (pp. 144–146) Relationship at the Centre: Healing in a troubled world by Godfrey T. Barrett-Lennard. Reviewed by Charles O'Leary (pp. 147–148) Working at Relational Depth in Counselling and Psychotherapy by Dave Mearns and Mick Cooper. Reviewed by Peter F. Schmid (pp. 149–151) Volume 5, Number 3: Autumn 2006 To read the editorial of this issue, click here • Editorial: The Challenge of Schizophrenia (pp.153–54) • A Person-Centered Approach to Schizophrenia – Jan van Blarikom (pp. 155–73) • Being-With and Being-Counter: Person-centered psychotherapy as an in-depth co-creative process of personalization – Peter F. Schmid and Dave Mearns (pp. 174–90) • The Development of Intersubjectivity in Relation to Psychotherapy and its Importance for Pre-Therapy – Hans Peters (pp. 191–207) • Emmanuel Levinas: Resource and challenge for therapy – Richard Worsley (pp. 208–20) • Book Reviews Humanistic Psychotherapies: Handbook of research and practice D. Cain and J. Seeman (Eds.). Reviewed by Christine H. Farber (pp. 221–3) The Psychotherapist's Own Psychotherapy: Patient and clinical perspectives Jesse D. Geller, John C. Norcross and David E. Orlinsky (Eds.). Reviewed by Henk Hanekamp (pp. 224–5)
THIS WEEK'S ONLINE BESTSELLERS
1. Flesh Wounds: New ways of understanding self-injury
2. Living with 'The Gloria Films'
3. The Tribes of the Person-Centred Nation: A guide to the schools of therapy related to the person-centred approach
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Living with 'The Gloria Films'
Pamela J Burry
2008
ISBN 978 1 906254 02 5
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Simply a great story and uplifiting read.
Love's Embrace: The autobiography of a person-centred therapist
Brian Thorne
2005 ISBN 1 898059 76 4
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The Life and Work of Carl Rogers
Howard Kirschenbaum
2007
ISBN 978 1 898 05993 6
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