|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Barbara K. Eisold (Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University, New York City)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.412kg ISBN: 9781138354418ISBN 10: 1138354414 Pages: 162 Publication Date: 11 February 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"Introduction Chapter One: The nature of psychosocial asylum evaluations: Implications for client and clinician Chapter Two: Heroic Asylum seekers from around the world Chapter Three: Female Genital Mutilation and the wish for ""life"": Cultural considerations in the development of personal agency Chapter Four: Central American Women on the Run: Feminicide and its history; Afterword; Appendix I: Asylum Law in Brief Appendix II: Imprisoning Asylum Seekers Appendix III: Outline: Prospective Affidavit of A Mental Health Professional in Support of An Asylum Seeker Appendix IV: Female Genital Mutilation: Facts and Figures Appendix V: Background information: My Clients/ Other Women with FGM"ReviewsBarbara Eisold's new book brings a deeply humane, emotional voice to our understanding of the plight of those who seek political asylum in the US. Eisold's clinical background as a psychotherapist, along with her years of experience evaluating those whose human rights have been egregiously violated in their home countries, helps us gain an experience-near view of the asylum process, which is under grave threat now. Her candor about what motivates her to do this work - the helplessness of the citizen hearing daily about the egregious violations of human rights occurring around the world - is inspiring. Eisold helps us see that mental health professionals can make a difference, one asylum seeker at a time. -Kerry J. Sulkowicz, MD, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst; Board Chair, Physicians for Human Rights; Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at New York University School of Medicine; Managing Principal, Boswell Group LLC Few people have Barbara Eisold's wide experience with asylum seekers and the challenging processes they encounter. Well-Founded Fear examines heroic asylum seekers, Central American women on the run, victims of female genital mutilation, and the forensic, political and affective aims of the psychosocial evaluation process. The cumulative effect of Eisold's clinical tales encapsulates both the horror of our age and the power of one energetic, committed, psychodynamically trained clinician to make a change in an individual human life. This book should be essential reading for mental health clinicians involved in asylum evaluations. -Spyros D. Orfanos, PhD, ABPP, Clinic Director, NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. Founder; Immigration and Human Rights Work Group Combining many years' clinical experience evaluating and treating refugees seeking asylum with a thorough understanding of the increasingly complex legal hurdles these asylees must negotiate, Well Founded Fear provides a comprehensive guide to mental health professionals and human rights activists who choose to work with this at risk population. In the current political climate, Eisold's expertise in conducting interviews and preparing reports to persuade the courts that her clients' fear of being returned to their country of origin is, indeed, well founded will prove invaluable. -Ghislaine Boulanger PhD, Wounded by Reality: Understanding and Treating Adult Onset Trauma As immigration has topped the national agenda, mental health professionals have moved to respond through asylum evaluations and treatment. Until this book, they have had insufficient clinical guidance. Eisold's work skillfully fills that gap. She provides basic information while simultaneously helping us enter the inner worlds of refugees who've suffered so much to survive. Simultaneously, she gracefully illustrates how psychodynamic understanding can enrich our clinical work. This book will become essential reading for those conducting evaluations or treatment of asylum seekers and refugees. -Stephen Soldz, Director, Applied Social Justice and Human Rights Program, Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis Barbara Eisold's new book brings a deeply humane, emotional voice to our understanding of the plight of those who seek political asylum in the US. Eisold's clinical background as a psychotherapist, along with her years of experience evaluating those whose human rights have been egregiously violated in their home countries, helps us gain an experience-near view of the asylum process, which is under grave threat now. Her candor about what motivates her to do this work - the helplessness of the citizen hearing daily about the egregious violations of human rights occurring around the world - is inspiring. Eisold helps us see that mental health professionals can make a difference, one asylum seeker at a time. -Kerry J Sulkowicz, MD, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst; Board Chair, Physicians for Human Rights; Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at New York University School of Medicine; Managing Principal, Boswell Group LLC Few people have Barbara Eisold's wide experience with asylum seekers and the challenging processes they encounter. Well-Founded Fear examines heroic asylum seekers, Central American women on the run, victims of female genital mutilation, and the forensic, political and affective aims of the psychosocial evaluation process. The cumulative effect of Eisold's clinical tales encapsulates both the horror of our age and the power of one energetic, committed, psychodynamically trained clinician to make a change in an individual human life. This book should be essential reading for mental health clinicians involved in asylum evaluations. -Spyros D Orfanos, PhD., ABPP, Clinic Director, NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. Founder; Immigration and Human Rights Work Group Combining many years' clinical experience evaluating and treating refugees seeking asylum with a thorough understanding of the increasingly complex legal hurdles these asylees must negotiate, Well Founded Fear provides a comprehensive guide to mental health professionals and human rights activists who choose to work with this at risk population. In the current political climate, Eisold's expertise in conducting interviews and preparing reports to persuade the courts that her clients' fear of being returned to their country of origin is, indeed, well founded will prove invaluable. -Ghislaine Boulanger PhD, Wounded by Reality: Understanding and Treating Adult Onset Trauma As immigration has topped the national agenda, mental health professionals have moved to respond through asylum evaluations and treatment. Until this book, they have had insufficient clinical guidance. Eisold's work skillfully fills that gap. She provides basic information while simultaneously helping us enter the inner worlds of refugees who've suffered so much to survive. Simultaneously, she gracefully illustrates how psychodynamic understanding can enrich our clinical work. This book will become essential reading for those conducting evaluations or treatment of asylum seekers and refugees. -Stephen Soldz, Director, Applied Social Justice and Human Rights Program, Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis Barbara Eisold's new book brings a deeply humane, emotional voice to our understanding of the plight of those who seek political asylum in the US. Eisold's clinical background as a psychotherapist, along with her years of experience evaluating those whose human rights have been egregiously violated in their home countries, helps us gain an experience-near view of the asylum process, which is under grave threat now. Her candor about what motivates her to do this work - the helplessness of the citizen hearing daily about the egregious violations of human rights occurring around the world - is inspiring. Eisold helps us see that mental health professionals can make a difference, one asylum seeker at a time. -Kerry J. Sulkowicz, MD, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst; Board Chair, Physicians for Human Rights; Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at New York University School of Medicine; Managing Principal, Boswell Group LLC Few people have Barbara Eisold's wide experience with asylum seekers and the challenging processes they encounter. Well-Founded Fear examines heroic asylum seekers, Central American women on the run, victims of female genital mutilation, and the forensic, political and affective aims of the psychosocial evaluation process. The cumulative effect of Eisold's clinical tales encapsulates both the horror of our age and the power of one energetic, committed, psychodynamically trained clinician to make a change in an individual human life. This book should be essential reading for mental health clinicians involved in asylum evaluations. -Spyros D. Orfanos, PhD, ABPP, Clinic Director, NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. Founder; Immigration and Human Rights Work Group Combining many years' clinical experience evaluating and treating refugees seeking asylum with a thorough understanding of the increasingly complex legal hurdles these asylees must negotiate, Well Founded Fear provides a comprehensive guide to mental health professionals and human rights activists who choose to work with this at risk population. In the current political climate, Eisold's expertise in conducting interviews and preparing reports to persuade the courts that her clients' fear of being returned to their country of origin is, indeed, well founded will prove invaluable. -Ghislaine Boulanger PhD, Wounded by Reality: Understanding and Treating Adult Onset Trauma As immigration has topped the national agenda, mental health professionals have moved to respond through asylum evaluations and treatment. Until this book, they have had insufficient clinical guidance. Eisold's work skillfully fills that gap. She provides basic information while simultaneously helping us enter the inner worlds of refugees who've suffered so much to survive. Simultaneously, she gracefully illustrates how psychodynamic understanding can enrich our clinical work. This book will become essential reading for those conducting evaluations or treatment of asylum seekers and refugees. -Stephen Soldz, Director, Applied Social Justice and Human Rights Program, Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis Author InformationBarbara Eisold has worked as an evaluator of asylum seekers in collaboration with a number of organizations, including Health Rights International, Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) and The Cardozo School of Law, where she is an associate faculty member. She is also a faculty member of the Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy and maintains a private psychotherapy practice in New York City. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |