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The 2008 Ralph Roughton Paper Award

The Committee on Gay & Lesbian Issues

of the American Psychoanalytic Association
Announces



The 2008 Ralph Roughton Paper Award





In honor of the founding Chairperson of the Committee on Gay and Lesbian Issues, the Ralph Roughton Paper Award was established in 1998 to give formal recognition for outstanding contributions to the psychoanalytic understanding of gay men and lesbians, and was expanded in 2007 to include bisexual and transgender issues. The award is intended to encourage psychoanalytic writers to address gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender issues and to increase awareness and understanding within the psychoanalytic community. The award is presented annually, and carries with it a cash prize of $500.



The winning author will be invited to present his/her paper at the 2009 Winter Meeting of the American Psychoanalytic Association in January.

The winner may submit the paper for review by Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association and, if accepted, it will be published as the winner of the Ralph Roughton Award.



Submission Guidelines: Papers must be unpublished (but may have been presented at professional meetings) and must conform to the Preparation of Manuscript guidelines outlined by Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, with the exception that the length should not exceed 30 double-spaced typed pages. Paper submissions are welcome from anyone regardless of institutional affiliation.



Entries must be submitted electronically no later than August 1, 2008.
Email one Word document containing the manuscript with all references to the author deleted, and email another Word document containing the author's name, e-mail address, address, phone number, and any Institutional affiliation to:



Gary Grossman, Ph.D.

Chair, Ralph Roughton Paper Prize

415 928•4662


Petition for an APA referendum against unethical interrogations


Be it resolved that psychologists may not work in settings where persons are held outside of, or in violation of, either International Law (e.g., the UN Convention Against Torture and the Geneva Conventions) or the US Constitution (where appropriate), unless they are working directly for the persons being detained or for an independent third party working to protect human rights.

To sign the petition, please locate your APA membership number (it's on all journals from APA) and log onto:

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/apademocracy/index.html


>
> EthicalAPA and WithholdAPAdues wants to bring the following Resolution to the APA:

>
> Be it resolved that psychologists may not work in
> settings where persons are held outside of, or in
> violation of, either International Law (e.g., the UN
> Convention Against Torture and the Geneva
> Conventions) or the US Constitution (where
> appropriate), unless they are working directly for
> the persons being detained or for an independent
> third party working to protect human rights.
>
> If we get signatures from 1% of all current APA members -- this includes those of you who are withholding your dues -- the APA has to bring this resolution before their entire membership for a vote. To read the whole resolution, footnotes, and frequently asked questions, with a link to the petition site, go to: ethicalapa.com
>
> Or to add your signature to the petition without all of the above, go to:
> http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/apademocracy/index.html
>
> You will need to know your APA membership number in order to sign. You can call the APA membership office at (800) 374-2721 (US & Canada Toll Free) or (202) 336-5580 (in DC).
>
> Please consider signing this. If you have read today's NYTimes in which the mental deterioration of the detainees in Guantanamo is described in painful detail on page 1, recalling that the APA is the only professional association continuing to support the US government's practices in these illegal sites, I think you will agree that psychologists should no longer allow themselves to be implicated by association with these practices.
>
> Ghislaine Boulanger
>
>
>



Michael Harvey leads CE course on Neuropsychoanalytically Informed Models of Treatment for Individuals With Brain Injury

#176: Neuropsychoanalytically Informed Models of Treatment for Individuals With Brain Injury
Course Level: Intermediate

Traumatic brain injury is a significant health problem. Psychiatric and emotional sequelae to TBI serve as the greatest obstacle to recovery. Nobel Prize winner Eric Kandel has called for the development of a comprehensive model of mind starting from the psychoanalytic theory to inform neuroscientific research. This INTERMEDIATE workshop will present scientific findings supporting an emerging neuropsychoanalytic model of mind. Application of neuropsychoanalytic theory for rehabilitation of brain injury will be discussed, including outcome data. Neuropsychoanalytically informed psychotherapy and supervision will be demonstrated via role-play.

This workshop is designed to help you: 1. Demonstrate knowledge of the theoretical and neuroscientific basis of Neuropsychoanalytically informed psychotherapy for individuals with brain injury, 2. Discuss the application of neuropsychoanalytically informed psychotherapy for persons with brain injury within the context of rehabilitation, 3. Discuss the application of theoretical and neuroscientific principles underlying neuropsychoanalytically informed psychotherapy with individuals who have suffered brain injury and identify three examples of this work from role play and discussion, and 4. Discuss the provision of neuropsychoanalytic supervision and identify at least three ways in which this would differ from other models of supervision from role-play and discussion.
Leader(s): Michael Harvey, PsyD, LifeQuest/RENEW, Sheridan, WY

Enrollment Limit: 40
CE Credits: 4
Time: 1p-4:50p
Member Non-Member
Advance $120.00 $140.00
Onsite $140.00 $180.00

All of the preconvention and convention workshops will be held at the Westin Boston Waterfront Hotel.
The 2008 Continuing Education Workshop Brochure in the May issue of the Monitor on Psychology will offer a complete in-depth listing (dates, times, fees, workshop descriptions) of all workshops. Contact the CEP Office at (800) 374-2721, ext. 5991, if you have any questions.




PRAGMATIC CASE STUDIES IN PSYCHOTHERAPY (PCSP)


PRAGMATIC CASE STUDIES IN PSYCHOTHERAPY (PCSP)
http://pcsp.libraries.rutgers.edu
*** a peer-reviewed, multi-theoretical, freely available e-journal of systematic case studies & case study method articles ***
FROM: Dan Fishman, Editor (dfish96198@aol.com) --


RE: Announcing the publication of our Winter, 2008 issue (Volume 4, Module 1),
involving a psychoanalytic case study:


An "Incurable" Schizophrenic: The Case of Mr. X
by Bertram Karon,
with Commentaries by
** Larry Davidson,
** Gary VandenBos, and
** Ann-Louise Silver


From an Introduction by the Action Editor, Ronald B. Miller:


"Dr. Karon's presentation in his case study is unconventional in two ways. First, Dr. Karon's approach to the case seems to violate a number of established assumptions about the psychological treatment of schizophrenics, e.g., (a) that detailed diagnosis is necessary, (b) that medication is a crucial tool in treatment, (c) that psychoanalytic therapy is of questionable value in treatment, (d) that psychiatrists should be viewed as close collaborators in any treatment, and (e) that the psychodynamic therapist should maintain technical neutrality, not being too directive in the patient's life. In his case study, Dr. Karon provides a rationale as to why he questions all these assumptions. Second, Dr. Karon does not hesitate to also address the social, professional, and moral consequences for the patient and therapist of both following, and departing from, these traditional assumptions. Dr. Karon's unconvention approach This places his work in the broad tradition of others like H. S. Sullivan, Frieda Fromm-Reichmann, Thomas Szasz, R.D. Laing, and Loren Mosher who have challenged the prevailing cultural and professional norms about the meaning of schizophrenic symptoms and our societal response to them. . . . Because of the unconventional aspects of Dr. Karon's case study, we have invited Commentators who both critique (Davidson) and support (Vandenbos and Silver) these components of Karon's innovative and challenging case study."


The 19th International congress of the Rorschach and Projective Methods, which will be held in Leuven, Belgium, July 22-25, 2008, in collaboration with the International Society of the Rorschach and Projective Methods (ISR).

The 19th International congress of the Rorschach and Projective Methods, which will be held in Leuven, Belgium, July 22-25, 2008, in collaboration with the International Society of the Rorschach and Projective Methods (ISR).
For more information, see the attached flyer, and our website: http://www.rorschach2008.org/
There will be much attention to psychodynamic research, and particularly the use of psychodynamically inspired measures to assess therapeutic change. In addition, Robert Bornstein, one our preeminent psychodynamic researchers, will give the plenary lecture. So I would encourage anyone on this list to submit proposals for papers, posters, or symposia. All key note lectures will be simultaneously translated in English, Spanish, French, and Japanese, so language barriers should not be an issue.
In addition, I would like to draw your attention to the fact that the deadline for submission has recently been extended to March 1, 2008 to facilitate the submission and registration process. Do not hesitate to contact me if you have any questions regarding submissions.

Prof. Dr. Jozef Corveleyn
Department of Psychology
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Tiensestraat 102
B-3000 Leuven
Tel: */32/16/325958 or 326044 (secr.)






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