Now featured in a Classics Edition with a new Foreword by Donald Boch, The Expanded Family Life Cycle integrates theory and current research with clinical guidelines and cases by two of the most-respected authors, teachers, and clinicians in the field of family therapy, Betty Carter and Monica McGol[...]
Note: This is the bound book only and does not include access to the Enhanced Pearson eText. To order the Enhanced Pearson eText packaged with a bound book, use ISBN 0134057279. Updated, expanded, and more comprehensive than ever, this new Fifth Edition a classic family therapy resource, The Expande[...]
In this revelatory book, esteemed family therapist Monica McGoldrick explores why families behave as they do, using genograms (family trees) to illustrate family patterns. Mapped out over a three-generation span, repeated estrangements, alliances, even divorces and suicides, prove more than coincide[...]
A family therapist uses the family trees of famous dynasties--such as the Kennedys--to show how behavior repeats itself from one generation to the next and to examine the effects of birth order and other factors[...]
The genogram is a graphic way of organising information gathered during a family assessment and identifying patterns in the family system. This popular text - updated and expanded to highlight new developments in genogram use - thoroughly explains how to draw, interpret and apply the genogram. Enter[...]
This revised edition of You Can Go Home Again explains how the family tree can help readers understand and mend family relationships and dynamics. Weaving together photographs and genograms of famous families-including the Fondas, Ghandis and Freuds-the author of Genograms (ISBN 978 0 393 70509 6) s[...]
The groundbreaking new text for culturally competent social work practice
In Multicultural Social Work Practice, author Derald Wing Sue, one of the most prominent and respected pioneers in diversity research and practice, explores and synthesizes the important theoretical, political, and philoso[...]
This classic Family Therapy text continues to provide "a new and more comprehensive way to think about human development and the life cycle," reflecting changes in society away from orientation toward the nuclear family, toward a more diverse and inclusive definition of "family." This expanded view [...]