Description
Assessing and Managing Problematic Sexual Interests: A Practitioner's Guide provides a thorough review of atypical sexual interests and offers various ways through which they can be measured and controlled, including compassion-focused and psychoanalytic approaches.
This unique guide presents a detailed analysis of deviant sexual interest. Part I, 'Assessment, ' overviews the range of sexual interests and fantasies in men and women. Part II, 'Management, ' investigates the cutting-edge tools, approaches, interventions, and treatment advances used in a variety of settings to control deviant sexual interest. In Part III, 'Approaches to assessment and management', the authors consider how females with sexual convictions can be assessed and how offence paralelling behaviour can be used for assessment and treatment. Throughout, Assessing and Managing Problematic Sexual Interests offers necessary perspectives and emerging research from international experts at the forefront of this field.
With a thorough assessment of current research and a critical overview of treatment advances for problematic sexual interests, Assessing and Managing Problematic Sexual Interests is an essential resource for clinical and forensic psychologists, probation officers, academics, students working in the field, and members of allied professional fields.
Author: Geraldine Akerman
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 07/20/2020
Pages: 288
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.55lbs
Size: 9.50h x 6.10w x 0.50d
ISBN13: 9780367254186
ISBN10: 0367254182
BISAC Categories:
- Psychology | Forensic Psychology
- Psychology | Human Sexuality (see also Social Science | Human Sexuality)
- Psychology | Movements | Psychoanalysis
About the Author
Geraldine Akerman is a Chartered and Registered Forensic Psychologist and Therapy Manager at HMP Grendon. She is a Visiting Lecturer at the University of Birmingham, UK and Honorary Professor of Cardiff Metropolitan University, UK and Chair Elect of the Division of Forensic Psychology.
Derek Perkins is a Clinical and Forensic Psychologist at Royal Holloway University of London, UK and Broadmoor Hospital, and Co-Director of 'onlinePROTECT.'
Ross M. Bartels is Senior Lecturer in Forensic Psychology and member of the Forensic and Clinical Research Group at the University of Lincoln, UK.
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