Articles
- The NICE Guidelines and Conflict Resolution by Joseph Schwartz
- Hungry for Love: Psychotherapy with a Schizophrenic Patient by Hazel Leventhal
- Reaching for Relationship: Exploring the Use of an Attachment Paradigm in the Assessment and Repair of the Dissociative Internal World by Sue Richardson
- Serial Migration and Forgetting: Some Caribbean Stories of Interrupted Attachments by Stephanie Davis- The Optimum Midrange: Infant Research, Literature, and Romantic Attachment by Beatrice Beebe and Edward McCrorie
- Bowlby’s Ghost: Political and Moral Reverberations of Attachment Theory by Kenneth Corvo and Ellen deLara
- History Interview on Kingsley Hall: Leon Redler with Victoria Hamilton, 30th October, 1971 by Victoria Hamilton
- Teaching tool Transference and Attachment in Therapy by Lynn E. Priddis and Noel D. Howieson
Joseph Schwartz is a training therapist and supervisor at the Bowlby Centre. He worked for over fifteen years in mental health research before becoming a clinician. He is the author of numerous papers on clinical practice, the history of psychoanalysis, and the lack of a role of genetics in mental distress. He has also written numerous books including Einstein for Beginners. He currently lives in London with his partner and two children.
Kate White is a training therapist, supervisor and teacher at The Bowlby Centre. Formerly senior lecturer at South Bank University in the Department of Nursing and Community Health Studies, she has used her extensive experience in adult education to contribute to the innovative psychotherapy curriculum developed at The Bowlby Centre. In addition to working as an individual psychotherapist, Kate runs workshops on the themes of attachment and trauma in clinical practice.