Thursday, 11 May 2023
Thursday, 11 May 2023
PROGRAMME PROGRAMME
us to debate the key professional and political challenges facing counselling in the 21st century.
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It’s 30 years since PCCS Books published its very first book – a short guide to using counselling skills on the telephone. Since then, we have published more than 200 books on counselling theory and practice, critical psychology and mental health.
The aim of this conference is to celebrate those 30 years, and all those books, and to pay tribute to our co-founder Pete Sanders, who died in 2022. Inspired by Pete’s vision, PCCS Books has always argued that the professional is political: that politics has a place in the counselling room and counselling has a role in the battles for social justice.
This conference will be an opportunity to discuss and debate the challenges that face counsellors and mental health practitioners today – resisting the medicalisation of talking therapies; tackling social injustice; challenging racism in counselling training and practice, and fostering agency and hope in the face of climate change.
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9.30am – 11am Session 1 - De-medicalising
Mental Health
John Read - Summarising the research on the social causes of psychosis and other MH problems, to help us to understand the political function of biological psychiatry and the drug companies
Lucy Johnstone - 'Beyond diagnosis' - Describing how the Power Threat Meaning Framework can help us to move beyond pathologisation
Joanna Moncrieff - ‘The consequences of medicalisation in clinical practise’
11am – 11.15am BREAK
11.15pm – 12.45pm Session 2 – Politics, Class and Social Justice in Counselling
Katy Woodger – ‘It’s all a bit “mirking” class!’
Mick Cooper - Therapy at the Heart of Social Change and Social Responsibility
12.45pm – 1.30 pm LUNCH
1.30pm – 3pm Session 3 - Decolonising Counselling
Neelam Zahid – Therapists Challenging Racism and Oppression: the unheard voices
Delroy Hall – The Gift of Uncomfortableness
Sarah Henry - Why Can’t White People Talk About Race? - This presentation will explore the ongoing challenges that White people face when engaging in conversations about race and ethnicity
3pm – 3.15pm BREAK
3.15pm - 4.45pm Session 4 - Holding Hope in the Face of Climate Crisis
Linda Aspey – Linda will explore the concept of “Active Hope” and its use in supporting people facing into difficult truths about our world, climate change, injustice, and destruction of nature
Nick Totton – Justice is Indivisible
4.45pm – 5pm Closing Remarks
9.15am Welcome – Sam Taylor / Opening remarks – Catherine Jackson (Chair)
MORNING MORNING SPEAKERS SPEAKERS
De-medicalising De-medicalising Mental Health Mental Health
with Joanna Moncrieff, Lucy Johnstone and John Read
Dr. John Read worked in the UK and USA for 20 years as a Clinical Psychologist and manager of mental health services. He joined the University of Auckland, New Zealand in 1994, where he became Director of the Clinical Psychology doctoral training programme He held the same position at the University of Liverpool when he returned to the UK in 2013. He is currently Professor of Clinical Psychology at the University of East London and Chair of the Institute for Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal. He is the author of over 150 research papers, co-editor (with Jacqui Dillon) of Models of Madness: Psychological, social and biological approaches to psychosis (Routledge, 2013) and founding editor of the research journal Psychosis: Psychological, Social and Integrative Approaches.
Dr. Lucy Johnstone is a consultant clinical psychologist, author of 'Users and abusers of psychiatry' (3rd edition Routledge 2021) and ‘A straight-talking guide to psychiatric diagnosis’ (PCCS Books, 2nd edition 2022); co-editor of 'Formulation in psychology and psychotherapy: making sense of people's problems' (Routledge, 2nd edition 2013); and co-author of ‘A straight talking introduction to the Power Threat Meaning Framework’, 2020, PCCS Books) along with a number of other chapters and articles taking a critical perspective on mental health theory and practice She is the former Programme Director of the Bristol Clinical Psychology Doctorate in the UK and has worked in Adult Mental Health settings for many years, most recently in a service in South Wales. Lucy was lead author, along with Professor Mary Boyle, for the ‘Power Threat Meaning Framework’ (2018), which outlines a conceptual alternative to psychiatric diagnosis and has attracted national and international attention.
De-medicalising De-medicalising Mental Health Mental Health
with Joanna Moncrieff, Lucy Johnstone and John Read
Joanna Moncrieff is a Professor of Critical and Social Psychiatry at University College London, and works as a consultantpsychiatristintheNHSinLondon Sheresearchers and writes about the over-use and misrepresentation of psychiatricdrugsandaboutthehistory,politicsandphilosophy of psychiatry more generally. She is currently leading UK government-funded research on reducing and discontinuing antipsychoticdrugtreatment(theRADARstudy) Sheisauthor ofnumerouspapersandherbooksincludeAStraightTalking IntroductiontoPsychiatricDrugsSecondedition(PCCSBooks, 2020),TheBitterestPills:TheTroublingStoryofAntipsychotic Drugs (2013) and The Myth of the Chemical Cure (2009) (PalgraveMacmillan)
Website|joannamoncrieff.com
Twitter|@joannamoncrieff
Politics, Class and Social Politics, Class and Social Justice in Counselling Justice in Counselling
with
Mick Cooper and Katy Woodger
Katy Woodger is a psychotherapist and supervisor in practice since 2009 Katy co-chairs the National Association for Trauma Specialists at the University of Nottingham and is also a member of an advisory board chaired by Sir Keir Starmer, which informs professional responses to sexual violence. Katy is about to complete a PhD at the Open University through the Grand Union doctoral training partnership between the Open University, Brunel University London and the University of Oxford. Katy’s research explores service user experiences of mental health organisations Katy is a contributor in Counselling, Class and Politics: Undeclared Influences in Therapy (2018) and #MeToo Counsellors and psychotherapists speak about sexual violence and abuse (2020) both published by PCCS Books
Mick Cooper is an internationally recognised author, trainer, and consultant in the field of humanistic, existential, and pluralistic therapies. He is a Chartered Psychologist, and Professor of Counselling Psychology at the University of Roehampton. Mick has facilitated workshops and lectures around the world, including New Zealand, Lithuania, and Florida. Mick's latest of many books explores the contribution that counselling and psychotherapy theory and practice can make to wider social progress and justice. Psychology at the Heart of Social Change: Towards a Progressive Vision for Society is published by Bristol University Press, 2023
AFTERNOON AFTERNOON SPEAKERS SPEAKERS
Decolonising Decolonising Counselling Counselling
with Neelam Zahid, Sarah Henry and Delroy Hall
Neelam Zahid I’m an Integrative Counsellor, Psychotherapist and Clinical Supervisor accredited by the BACP and have worked as a therapist since 2003 I previously worked within higher education for over a decade and currently have my own private practice. I’m also the Deputy Course Leader for the Foundation year at the Minster Centre and teach on the Introduction to Counselling Skills Course. In addition to this, I’m currently a Visiting Lecturer at the University of Westminster teaching on the B Sc Psychology and Counselling and Introduction to Counselling Skills Course. My areas of interest are intersectionality, difference, and diversity and have contributed to the following publications: The Handbook of Transcultural Counselling and Psychotherapy (2001, eds Colin Lago) and Black Identities + White Therapies: Race, Respect + Diversity (2021, eds Colin Lago and Divine Charura)
Counsellor, Coach and Trainer
Dr Delroy Hall With over three decades of experience, Delroy Hall is a trained counsellor, wellbeing practitioner, trainer, and independent scholar. Delroy has given lectures and academic papers nationally and internationally He has extensive keynote speaker experience and has lectured at Harvard University and Boston College Massachusetts, USA Delroy has coordinated mental health projects and is currently working with Birmingham Community Health Care Trust (BCHC) facilitating the Inclusive Leadership component on their ‘Inspire Leadership Programme. He is also coordinator for a Black Male Suicide Prevention programme under the auspices Sheffield Health and Social Care (SCHC).Since April 2020, Delroy has hosted live wellbeing sessions on Facebook and now it is shown on LinkedIn, Twitter and soon, YouTube. Delroy is the Chaplain for Sheffield United Football Club As a former four hundred metre hurdler, ranked No 2 in Great Britain in 1979, Delroy keeps fit and is presently training for various aqua bike events in the UK
Decolonising Decolonising Counselling Counselling
with Neelam Zahid, Sarah Henry and Delroy Hall
Sarah Henry is a published author, person-centred counsellor and counselling tutor. She is a contributor the book People Not Pathology: Freeing Therapy From The Medical Model, writing a chapter focused on the overmedicalisation of Black people. Sarah has also presented nationally about the impact of race and ethnicity within the counselling and tutoring relationship. Born in England to a Black British mother and Jamaican father, Sarah's formative experience was a notable dynamic of complementary and clashing norms. Elements of this disparity continue into adulthood and inform her work, both implicitly and explicitly
Holding Hope in the Holding Hope in the Face of Climate Crisis Face of Climate Crisis
with Nick Totton and Linda Aspey
Linda Aspey is a leadership coach, facilitator, psychotherapeutic counsellor, BACP Fellow, and activist. She works with people and organisations to support them in engaging and acting on climate, environmental and social crises.
Nick Totton has been a body psychotherapist for forty years, and a supervisor and trainer for nearly as long. He has written a number of books, including Embodied Relating: The Ground of Psychotherapy, Wild Therapy: Rewilding Inner and Outer Worlds, and (forthcoming from PCCS Books) Different Bodies: Deconstructing Normality He is the founding editor of Psychotherapy and Politics International, and a previous chair of Psychotherapists for Social Responsibility and the Psychotherapists and Counsellors Union. Nick has a daughter and two grandchildren He lives in Sheffield with his partner and grows vegetables.
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