This book attempts to 'shake up' the current complacency around therapy and 'mental health' behaviours by putting therapy fully into context using Social Contextual Analysis, showing how changes to our social, discursive and societal environments.
Bernard Guerin Poradie kníh
Bernard Guerin je literárny tvorca, ktorého dielo sa zaoberá psychologickými a sociálnymi aspektmi ľudskej existencie. Jeho písanie preniká do hlbín ľudskej mysle a skúma zložité vzťahy medzi jednotlivcami a spoločnosťou. Prostredníctvom svojich textov ponúka jedinečný pohľad na motivácie a správanie, ktoré formujú náš svet. Jeho literárny prístup je charakterizovaný hĺbkou a citom pre nuansy.




- 2022
- 2020
Turning Mental Health into Social Action
- 216 stránok
- 8 hodin čítania
By deconstructing modern talking therapies, this book explores how societal structures impact mental health and limit opportunities. It presents a fresh perspective on psychology, emphasizing the influence of social environments on behavior rather than solely internal factors. As part of a trilogy, it aims to redefine the approach to mental health, advocating for a broader understanding of the interplay between individual experiences and societal contexts.
- 2020
Turning Psychology into a Social Science
- 200 stránok
- 7 hodin čítania
This book shows how everything we do is social and how research from social anthropology, sociolinguistics, and sociology can be integrated into a new form of psychology. It is part of a trilogy that offers a new way of doing psychology focusing on people's social environments as determining their behaviour, rather than internal attributions.
- 2020
Turning Psychology into Social Contextual Analysis
- 200 stránok
- 7 hodin čítania
This book puts the 'social' back into social psychology and offers a more integrated way of thinking about and researching people and intervening to change what people do. It is part of a trilogy that offers a new way of doing psychology focusing on people's social environments as determining their behaviour, rather than internal attributions.