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Book
Endorsements 
Click
here to order
"Transformative Family Therapy:
Just Families in a Just Society"
on amazon.com.

Kaethe Weingarten, Ph.D.
Associate Clinical Professor of Psychology,
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA
Director, the Witnessing Project (www.witnessingproject.org)
Director, Program in Family, Trauma, and Resilience, The Family
Institute of Cambridge
Author of: Common
Shock: Witnessing Violence Everyday (1994).
Transformative Family Therapy: Just Families in
a Just Society is a triumph! Based on the innovations
of the Cultural Context Model, the book offers therapists grounded
theory; a practical, hands-on approach; and, crucially, a means
to integrate the principles of practice into their own clinical
contexts. Transformative Family Therapy tackles the
hardest issues of our day – domestic violence, addiction,
racism, among others –and demonstrates how clinicians can
not only heal the individuals that consult them but generate social
change in the institutions with which clients interact and in the
communities where they live. Further, this brilliant, compassionate
holistic book practices what it preaches on every page: it gives
over the tools – conceptual and clinical – to enact
a liberatory, socially just therapy. Therapists of every
persuasion and at every stage of practice will benefit from this
important book.
Terry Kupers
M.D. M.S. P.
Professor, The Wright Institute, San Francisco, CA
Author of: Public Therapy, Revisioning Men's
Live (1994), and Prison Madness (1999). About
Transformative Family Therapy:
This book offers an extraordinarily thoughtful method
for helping people with their personal problems while enhancing
awareness of pervasive social injustices. Previous attempts
to incorporate clinical work with social concerns have floundered
as soon as they began collapsing psychotherapy into social action,
essentially advocating: "Don't waste time analyzing yourself,
join in social justice struggles." Those seeking a deeper
understanding of their personal lives had to give up on integrating
therapy with social action, and turn instead to narrowly clinical
texts for help with their personal quest. Now Transformative
Family Therapy offers a rigorous approach to depth therapy that
unabashedly incorporates the struggle to transform society. The
message is clear and convincing: we need to change our community
and our society if we are to live the better personal and family
lives we talk about in therapy. Social injustices
- including poverty, racism, sexism and homophobia - permeate personal
lives. The authors describe in practical terms their integrated
approach to individual, family and social problems, with
poignant vignettes, so the reader can quickly become better able
to make deep therapeutic interventions while fostering community
and social justice.
Nancy Boyd-Franklin,
Ph.D.
Professor, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
Author of: Black Families in Therapy: Understanding
the African American Experience, 2nd Edition {2003).
This brilliant book expands the field of family therapy
to include a Cultural Context Model for social justice practice.
It is a courageous work that challenges power, privilege and oppression
in its many forms including patriarchy, sexism, racism, classism
and homophobia. Through vivid case examples, therapists will learn
techniques including the unique use of culture circles and sponsors
to empower clients to claim their own voices. This pioneering volume
makes the concepts of critical consciousness and the notion of healing
as a community effort accessible to all practitioners in the mental
health field.
Charles Waldegrave
and Taimalieutu Kiwi Tamasese
The Family Centre, Lower Hutt, Wellington, New Zealand
Authors of: Just Therapy – a Journey: A Collection
of Papers from the Just Therapy Team, New Zealand.
Waldegrave C, Tamasese K, Tuhaka F and Campbell W (2003) Dulwich
Centre Publications, Adelaide
In this book these authors address the
broad issues of social justice as they relate to therapy in a fresh
and exciting way. They consistently expose the contextual
vacuum in most mainstream models by pointing to those experiences
and influences beyond the family that damage relationships because
they are unfair and often unjust. The analysis of latent power
in the way therapists approach key issues around cultural difference,
gender equity, socio-economic disadvantage and sexual orientation
reveals a commitment to holistic and sustainable healing. As
with the "Just Therapy" approach, the critical factors
of privilege on the one hand, and marginalisation on the other,
are addressed openly in the context of good therapy. The innovative
application of movies in the therapeutic process opens space for
broader reflective discussion between therapists and clients and
the descriptions of process are clear and helpful. This is
an exciting book that challenges conventional assumptions and broadens
the discussion of good therapy. (Click here to view or download Just Therapy publications, including " "Just Therapy” with Families
on Low Incomes.")
If
you would like to learn more about working with the Institute for
Family Services,
please call us at 732-873-1663 or
e-mail us at WeCare4UIFS@aol.com.
Institute
for Family Services, 3 Clyde Road, Suite 101, Somerset, NJ 08873
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