Havens: Stories of True Community Healing

Author:   Leonard Jason ,  Martin Perdoux
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN:  

9780275983208


Pages:   176
Publication Date:   30 June 2004
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 17 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Havens: Stories of True Community Healing


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Overview

For good reasons, Americans are growing concerned about the cost of health care and housing. There are many reasons why people need care-the addiction of a teenage child or spouse, an elderly relative in need of nursing home care, a psychological disorder, or a chronic medical condition—but even moderately successful institutional solutions for these problems are often too costly to be truly helpful. The cost of healthcare is so high it can result in homelessness. Leonard Jason and Martin Perdoux show us a relatively low-cost and effective solution growing in neighborhoods across the country: true community. People are moving in together to meet each other's needs and, in the process, create a much higher quality of life than they would find in an institution. People living together in these healing communities include the elderly, recovering alcoholics and drug addicts, and people suffering from mental illness, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, AIDS, or Multiple Chemical Sensitivity. These communities offer them a way to recover the caring, structure, direction, and respect that a strong family can provide. The authors of this work show us how communities created out of necessity by their members constitute a more sustained, natural means to healing. In his foreword, Thomas Moore points out that the communities described in this book are not only physical homes, but also shelters for the soul, places to find the deepest kind of security. Here you will see concrete ways imaginative leaders help those in trouble find themselves rather than become dependent on institutions. It is a new and promising imagination of how social healing works: not by setting up more programs, but by treating people in trouble as human beings, with certain emotional and social needs. This book teaches how to re-imagine this whole process, and now, in an increasingly technical and lonely world, we need this precious wisdom more than ever.

Full Product Details

Author:   Leonard Jason ,  Martin Perdoux
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Praeger Publishers Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 24.40cm
Weight:   0.431kg
ISBN:  

9780275983208


ISBN 10:   027598320
Pages:   176
Publication Date:   30 June 2004
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 17 years
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Thomas Moore Acknowledgments Preface The Shrinking of Community in America More Than a Blessing The Dignity of Aging A Retreat from Mental Illness: Learning the Art of Living The Invisible Patient Other Havens References Appendices About the Authors

Reviews

Havens inspires, instructs, and offers practical ways of restoring the lost soul of contemporary life. It is the best book on community healing since the publication of The Therapeutic Community by Maxwell Jones more than fifty years ago and it once again declares how the best professionals support and encourage the deep healing that ordinary people instill in one another. Jason and Perdoux show how easily we lose contact with the truth that well being and vitality require committed and creative connections with others in everyday life situations where we are able to take responsibility, contribute, and discover how we need others to fulfill ourselves. -Shaun McNiff, University Professor, Lesley University, and author of Creating with Others


I am going to use this book with my classes in community psychology because it embodies so much of what I want them to learn.... It is scholarly but passionate, thorough yet thoroughly readable. I have a space already reserved on my bookshelf for it, but I doubt it will get to sit on my shelf for very long. -Maurice J. Elias, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology and Coordinator, Internship Program in Applied, School, and Community Psychology Rutgers University Havens inspires, instructs, and offers practical ways of restoring the lost soul of contemporary life. It is the best book on community healing since the publication of The Therapeutic Community by Maxwell Jones more than fifty years ago and it once again declares how the best professionals support and encourage the deep healing that ordinary people instill in one another. Jason and Perdoux show how easily we lose contact with the truth that well being and vitality require committed and creative connections with others in everyday life situations where we are able to take responsibility, contribute, and discover how we need others to fulfill ourselves. -Shaun McNiff, University Professor, Lesley University, and author of Creating with Others Leonard Jason and Martin Perdoux have given us a warm-hearted, brilliantly illuminating recipe for improving the mental and physical health of Americans. As a people, as a organism of interlocking communities, we are lucky to have this good book. -James McManus, author of Going to the Sun and Positively Fifth Street This is an engaging book full of hope, humanity and challege. It brings us face to face with the other, who has been pathologized, and embraces them as one of us, who all seek a life of grace, meaning, and community. Would that we in the social services, social sciences and public administration could empathize as well and take direction from the experiences of empowerment and connection found here. -John Moritsugu, Ph.D., Department of Psychology Pacific Luther University Supportive communities can restore people from illness. That is the thesis of Jason and Perdoux's new book, and they make their case compellingly. The many successful case studies cited do not depend on money, or on professional credentials; instead they rely on inner strengths within us, upon open-hearted and committed relationships of equals, sustained over time. Anyone looking for new ways to build caring, inclusive, and healing communities should not fail to read this book and heed its lessons. -Bill Berkowitz, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Psychology University of Massachusetts, Lowell


Leonard Jason and Martin Perdoux have given us a warm-hearted, brilliantly illuminating recipe for improving the mental and physical health of Americans. As a people, as a organism of interlocking communities, we are lucky to have this good book. -James McManus, author of Going to the Sun and Positively Fifth Street I am going to use this book with my classes in community psychology because it embodies so much of what I want them to learn.... It is scholarly but passionate, thorough yet thoroughly readable. I have a space already reserved on my bookshelf for it, but I doubt it will get to sit on my shelf for very long. -Maurice J. Elias, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology and Coordinator, Internship Program in Applied, School, and Community Psychology Rutgers University This is an engaging book full of hope, humanity and challege. It brings us face to face with the other, who has been pathologized, and embraces them as one of us, who all seek a life of grace, meaning, and community. Would that we in the social services, social sciences and public administration could empathize as well and take direction from the experiences of empowerment and connection found here. -John Moritsugu, Ph.D., Department of Psychology Pacific Luther University Supportive communities can restore people from illness. That is the thesis of Jason and Perdoux's new book, and they make their case compellingly. The many successful case studies cited do not depend on money, or on professional credentials; instead they rely on inner strengths within us, upon open-hearted and committed relationships of equals, sustained over time. Anyone looking for new ways to build caring, inclusive, and healing communities should not fail to read this book and heed its lessons. -Bill Berkowitz, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Psychology University of Massachusetts, Lowell Havens inspires, instructs, and offers practical ways of restoring the lost soul of contemporary life. It is the best book on community healing since the publication of The Therapeutic Community by Maxwell Jones more than fifty years ago and it once again declares how the best professionals support and encourage the deep healing that ordinary people instill in one another. Jason and Perdoux show how easily we lose contact with the truth that well being and vitality require committed and creative connections with others in everyday life situations where we are able to take responsibility, contribute, and discover how we need others to fulfill ourselves. -Shaun McNiff, University Professor, Lesley University, and author of Creating with Others


Author Information

LEONARD A. JASON, Ph.D, is Professor of Psychology at DePaul University, in Chicago, where he heads the Center for Community Research. He has published more than 350 articles and has edited or authored 14 books. He has been a member of the editorial boards for seven peer-reviewed psychology journals, has served on review committees of the National Institute of Drug Abuse and the National Institute of Mental Health, and has received more than $16 million in federal grants to support his research. He is former president of the Division of Community Psychology of the American Psychological Association. MARTIN PERDOUX, MAAT, is a writer and registered art therapist who has worked eight years in the fields of psychiatry and special education. His writing has been published in the Chicago Reader, The Reader's Guide to Arts and Entertainment, and Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association. He is a Consulting Editor at Behavior Online, a forum for mental health professionals.

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