Student NewsWe've got a list of psychodynamically oriented internships in the Student section
Take a look!
Students
Student Essay contestThe 2006 Section V Student Essay Contest
$500 Prize for the Best Graduate Student Essay
Encountering the Unconscious: A Personal Essay Exploring the Concept & Experience of the Unconscious
Deadline: October 15, 2006
See the
Student Page for details
Ethics PetitionMany of you may be aware of the grassroots protest among American Psychological Association members that began after the NY Times reported on June 7 that psychiatrists will no longer be used to help interrogate detainees. In a new policy, psychiatrists are explicitly discouraged from participating in such efforts. However, the American Psychological Association's spokesman and director of ethics, Dr. Stephen Behnke, is reported to have said that psychologists believe that helping military interrogators makes a valuable contribution because it is part of the effort to prevent terrorism.
A online petition for psychologists who unequivocally oppose this policy is now available for signatures at:
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/483607021
The Section V board hopes that all of you will add your names to this petition. We also hope that you will pass it on to colleagues who are members of the APA in clinics, hospitals, and universities, and wherever you work.
SECTION V'S ALL-DIVISION MORTON SCHILLINGER 2006 BIANNUAL ESSAY COMPETITION IS THE UNCONSCIOUS NECESSARY?
We're pleased to announce the winners!
Victor Iannuzzi, Ph.D. and Todd Essig, Ph.D. will share first prize.
The prizes were awarded at the Spring Meeting of Division 39 in Philadelphia on April 22, 2006
Their essays are posted in the
Essays section.
New Student Page
We've got a new student page run by Student members David Kemmerer and Liz Hahn.
Take a look!
http://www.sectionfive.org/students/
Section V at APA, August 2006Johanna Krout Tabin, a Member of the Section V Board, was chair of the Section V invited panel in August at the APA convention:
Trauma, Obvious or Hidden: Possibilities for Treatment
We psychologists use the term trauma to cover the whole spectrum of psychological and physical experiences which cause a sense of extreme psychic danger. This symposium will refine our clinical sensitivity to three manifestations of traumatic reaction.
Marvin Hurvich examines the annihilation anxieties that may accompany efforts to deal with trauma.
Sharon Farber calls attention to the dissociative process that some patients need when trying to deal with trauma, using their bodies as objects.
Michael Harvey will present a paper analysing the psychoanalytic "disinterest" in working with individuals with brain injury in which he examines the counter-transference difficulties which underlie this neglect.
All the panelists are members of Section V.
These papers appear in the
Essays section.