Practitioner-Based Research: Power, Discourse and Transformation

Practitioner-Based Research: Power, Discourse and Transformation

by Dawn Freshwater (Editor), Dawn Freshwater (Editor), John Lees (Editor)

Synopsis

Practitioner-Based Research is concerned, in particular, with the research which is undertaken by healthcare practitioners and the evidence which they generate as a result of investigating their practice. In so doing it recognizes that, as well as working in academic life, practitioner researchers are often working as practitioners outside the Academy. It argues that the work of practitioner researchers has a significant contribution to make to healthcare research and so needs to be disseminated further in order to create balanced research communities within the healthcare professions. This book will help academic researchers to broaden the limited ontological and epistemological perspectives of their research. It will also encourage healthcare practitioners who have not been trained academically to develop their research skills and to realize that they are actually researching in their practice on a day-to-day basis. Finally, it will provide a degree of transparency about therapeutic processes to help clients and patients to see aspects of professional practice and development which are usually hidden from them.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 252
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 15 Dec 2008

ISBN 10: 1855755386
ISBN 13: 9781855755383

Media Reviews
'Vital and transformative perspectives on professional life. Challenging dominant discourses and power hierarchies, this socially aware and politically engaged book heralds new developments in research and practice in professions such as counselling, psychotherapy and nursing.'- Andrew Samuels, Professor of Analytical Psychology, University of Essex
Author Bio
John Lees is Senior Lecturer in Mental Health at the University of Leeds, counselling and psychotherapy practitioner in private practice in London and Sussex, and founder editor of a Routledge journal, Psychodynamic Counselling (now Psychodynamic Practice). He has co-edited four books and published numerous book chapters and professional articles. He designed an MSc in Therapeutic Counselling, was Programme leader of that course for twelve years and co-designed three other therapy-orientated postgraduate courses, at the University of Greenwich. He has spoken at conferences in the United States, Japan, and Australia, has been visiting scholar at colleges or universities in Japan, Australia and India and has designed a course on anthroposophic psychotherapy in Japan.