Preface. I PARADIGM AND PRACTICE. 1 Treatable or not treatable in the Netherlands Wilma van den Berg and Hjalmar van Marle. 2 Personality Disorders: the paradigmatic challenge to psychotherapy Murray Cox. 3 Forensic psychotherapy and the empirical paradigm Friedemann Pfafflin. II TREATMENT ISSUES. 4 To treat or not to treat: the therapeutic challenge Estela Welldon. 5 Challenges to the ambulatory treatment process and how to survive them: a case study Elif Gurisik. 6 Personality disorders: the challenge for residential treatment Marijke Drost. 7 The action film Terminator - gateway to aggressive fantasies in adolescence? Reinmar du Bois. 8 Residential forensic treatment: the interplay between case management and institutional management Henri Wiertsema and Frans Derks. 9 Treating psychopaths in England Donald West. 10 Challenges as options Hjalmar van Marle. III PSYCHOTHERAPY AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM. 11 Psychopathic disorder and therapeutic jurisprudence Nigel Eastman. 12 Between couch and bench Wilma van den Berg. 13 Personality disorder as a challenge to the criminal justice system Tegwyn Williams. 14 Seduction of the regime Enda Dooley. 15 The challenge for planning social policy Irma Ballering. 16 Our responsibilities as forensic therapists Christopher Cordess. IV THE REALITY OF THE VICTIM. 17 The challenge of the victim Gwen Adshead. 18 Victim and perpetrator John Young. 19 The victim in the offender Cleo van Velsen. INDEX.
Hjalmar van Marle is Professor of Forensic Psychiatry at the University of Nijmegen and Medical Superintendent at the Pieter Baan Centrum, Utrecht, Netherlands. Wilma van den Berg is Legal Counsel at the Forensic Observation Clinic at the Pieter Baan Centrum, Utrecht, Netherlands
`The varied content of this book effectively provides a panoptic
view of the layers and subtleties of the challenges in forensic
psychotherapy. Consequently, the book would appeal to both novice
and those who are interested in specific aspects of the field. To
conclude, I think this is a book which seems to look ahead at the
future of psychotherapy whilst examining what is already in
existence. To make the assertion that there are many challenges to
forensic psychotherapy is progress in itself and further
examination of these challenges can only benefit the discipline and
its relationships within a wider framework.'
*Therapeutic Communities*
…an interesting collection of papers
*Forensic Update*
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