Description
This book provides an analysis of the meaning of safety and security across the contexts of community and public life, throughout the life span, and within a therapeutic framework, examining threats and the strategies for coping with them.
The book starts in Part I with a discussion of general safety and security concepts in the socio-cultural context. Part II of the book details the role of a sense of security in psychological assistance, psychotherapy and supervision, while Part III centres on safety and security at different life stages. Drawing on the tenets of modern attachment theory and trauma theory, chapter authors address questions of safety, danger, and protection for both individuals and groups, across a variety of fields of knowledge and expertise. Themes such as loneliness, play and exploration, evil and forgiveness, health and death, and spirituality and healing are discussed as practice examples, learning points, and tips.
A wide range of health and social care professional practitioners will find this book useful in exploring social, interpersonal, and psychological aspects of safety and security.
Table of Contents
Part 1: Safety and security in the world
1. The need for safety and security
Bibi van den Berg
2. Looking for a safe Self in a dangerous world. The place of psychotherapists: citizens - observers - beacons
Barbara Józefik and Bogdan de Barbaro
3. When home becomes a threat. Polish experience of homo-, bi- and transphobia
Daniel Bąk
4. Living with climate change and environmental crisis. Between climate anxiety and new collective narratives
Magdalena Budziszewska
5. Ecocultural context of attachment security, sense of safety, and trust
Katarzyna Lubiewska
Part 2: Safety and security in the community context
6. “I am still scattered”: Attachment security and belonging after forced migration
Lydia Guthrie
7. “We will keep you safe”: Reflections on caring relationships in children’s residential homes
Laura Ogi, Andy Glossop and Olivia Polisano
8. Safety and danger in an intensive care context: Psychological and systemic approaches to staff support during the COVID-19 pandemic (and beyond)
Jennifer Wallis
9. Safety and security in psychotherapy practice and supervision
Arlene Vetere
10. Spirituality – A meaningful philosophy of life and a “lifeline” in times of crises
Åse Holmberg and Per Jensen
Part 3: Safety and security in a couple & family context
11. Caregiver Roles in Children’s Threat and Safety Learning: Neuroscientific Evidence and Real-World Implications
Jordan L. Mullins and Kalina J. Michalska
12. ‘Beyond Sensitivity’: Understanding caregiving compromises in adverse contexts using the Meaning of the Child Interview
Ben Grey
13. Safety in the home-school system with relation to autism: The SwiS approach
Tara Vassallo, Rudi Dallos & Rebecca Stancer
14. ‘and nothing but the Truth’
Chip Chimera
15. Second Phase Parenting: Attachment and parenting adult children
Myrna Gower
16. Polyamorous relationships: Inspirations in the search for new ways of understanding safety and security
Szymon Chrząstowski
17. Dying, death and bereavement
Jo Wilson