Person-Centered & Experiential Therapies Work
A review of the research on Counseling, Psychotherapy and related practices
Book edited by Mick Cooper, Jeanne Watson and Dagmar Hölldampf
PCE Works
This book is the product of a World Association for Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapy and Counseling Task Force examining the evidence base for person-centered and experiential counseling and psychotherapy.
Person-Centered and Experiential Therapies Work provides a comprehensive, systematic and accessible review of the evidence base for the approach and the methods and measures by which it can be evaluated. It gives clear evidence for the effectiveness of person-centered and experiential therapies, and is an essential resource for students and practitioners who want to know more about the empirical support for their work, and to promote it with confidence.
Special offer for all members of the World Association for Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapy and Counseling:
WAPCEPC member price: £17.00
(UK delivery free, Europe delivery £1.70, Rest of World £3.40)
• To access this offer, click on the following link: WAPCEPC SPECIAL OFFER
• WAPCEPC members can also order by telephone - orders are dispatched to addresses on the membership database. To order call +44 (0)1989 763 900 office hours 09.00 - 17.00hrs.
• This offer is available to WAPCEPC members only. Membership status will be checked.
Contents
1. The Effectiveness of Person-Centered and Experiential Therapies: A review of the meta-analyses
Robert Elliott & Elizabeth Freire
2. Effectiveness of Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapies with Children and Young People:A review of
outcome studies
Dagmar Hölldampf, Michael Behr & Ina Crawford
3. Effectiveness beyond Psychotherapy: The person-centered, experiential paradigm in education, parenting, and
management
Jeffrey H. D. Cornelius-White & Renate Motschnig-Pitrik
4. Qualitative Meta-Analysis of Outcomes of Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapies
Ladislav Timulak & Mary Creaner
5. Clients as Active Self-Healers: Implications for the person-centered approach
Arthur C. Bohart & Karen Tallman
6. Relating Process to Outcome in Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapies: The role of the relationship
conditions and clients' experiencing
Jeanne C. Watson, Leslie S. Greenberg & Germain Lietaer
7. Operationalizing Incongruence: Measures of self-discrepancy and affect regulation
Jeanne C. Watson & Neill Watson
8. Measuring the Relationship Conditions in Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapies: Past, present, and
future
Elizabeth Freire & Soti Grafanaki
9. Researching in a Person-Centered Way
Paul Wilkins
10. Key Priorities for Research in the Person-Centered and Experiential Field: ‘If not now, when?'
Mick Cooper, Jeanne C. Watson & Dagmar Hölldampf