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Social Defences Against Anxiety : Explorations in a Paradigm.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Tavistock Clinic SeriesPublisher: London : Taylor & Francis Group, 2014Copyright date: ©2015Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (401 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780429919305
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Social Defences Against AnxietyDDC classification:
  • 150.195
LOC classification:
  • RC552.S62 -- S63 2015eb
Online resources:
Contents:
COVER -- CONTENTS -- SERIES EDITOR'S PREFACE -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- ABOUT THE EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS -- Introduction: revisiting the paradigm -- PART I Theoretical -- CHAPTER ONE Obsessional-punitive defences in care systems: Menzies Lyth revisited -- CHAPTER TWO Beyond identifying social defences: "working through" and lessons from people whispering -- CHAPTER THREE A psycho-social perspective on social defences -- CHAPTER FOUR Social defences in the information age -- CHAPTER FIVE Defences against innovation: the conservation of vagueness -- CHAPTER SIX Reconceptualizing social defences for the purpose of organizational change: causes, consequences, and the contribution of cultural theory -- PART II Health and nursing -- CHAPTER SEVEN Reflections on Isabel Menzies Lyth in the light of developments in nursing care -- CHAPTER EIGHT "I'm beyond caring": a response to the Francis Report -- CHAPTER NINE Anxiety at the front line -- CHAPTER TEN A partnership of policing and health systems: containing the dynamics of sexual violence -- CHAPTER ELEVEN Running the gauntlet of institutional defence: from the prison gate to the hospital wing -- PART III The private sector -- CHAPTER TWELVE Extreme work environments: beyond anxiety and social defence -- CHAPTER THIRTEEN Corporate cultures and inner conflicts -- CHAPTER FOURTEEN Defences against anxiety in the law -- PART IV Social welfare and education -- CHAPTER FIFTEEN Spotlit: defences against anxiety in contemporary human service organizations -- CHAPTER SIXTEEN Still not good enough! Must try harder: an exploration of social defences in schools -- CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Work discussion groups as a container for sexual anxieties in schools -- CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Social defences in nurseries and the contemporary value of the concept.
CHAPTER NINETEEN Projective identification and unconscious defences against anxiety: social work education, practice learning, and the fear of failure -- CHAPTER TWENTY Unconscious defences against anxiety in a Youth Offending Service -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.
Summary: This book revisits the theory of social systems as a defence against anxiety first set out by Elliott Jaques and Isabel Menzies Lyth in papers which they published in 1955 and 1960, and which have been influential points of reference ever since. Menzies Lyth's study of the nursing system of a general hospital, with its roots in both psychoanalysis and socio-technical systems thinking, has remained one of the most convincing demonstrations of the influence of unconscious anxieties on social behaviour, and of their effects in inducing dysfunctional defensive systems in organisations. The theory of 'social defences against anxiety' remains one of the most significant contributions of the 'Tavistock school' to the study of human relations.Contributors explore this theory as a generative paradigm, capable both of theoretical extension and of empirical application to different institutional settings. They review changes which have taken place in the theoretical and social context since these ideas were first advanced, and assess what conceptual revisions these developments require. The relevance of Menzies Lyth's ideas to contemporary settings of health and nursing is examined, as is the value of these ideas in explaining anxieties and their concomitant social defences in the private sector and in various fields of public education and welfare. Finally, the book discusses some educational and therapeutic practices which have evolved at the Tavistock and elsewhere to 'contain' unconscious anxieties and to mitigate damaging forms of defence against them.Contributors to the book include writers distinguished for their contributions to the fields of organisational consultancy, to applied socio-psychoanalytic thought, and to research and professional practice in several fields.Contributors: Philip Boxer, Andrew Cooper, Maxim de Sauma, Peter Elfer, MarcusSummary: Evans, Sarah Fielding, Jo Finch, William Halton, Larry Hirschorn, Paul Hoggett, Sharon Horowitz, Emil Jackson, Sebastian Kraemer, James Krantz, Debbie Langstaff, Amanda Lees, Susan Long, Aideen Lucey, Nick Papadopoulos, Jason Schaub, Mannie Sher, Jon Stokes, Simon Tucker, Liz Tutton, Anne Zachary.
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COVER -- CONTENTS -- SERIES EDITOR'S PREFACE -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- ABOUT THE EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS -- Introduction: revisiting the paradigm -- PART I Theoretical -- CHAPTER ONE Obsessional-punitive defences in care systems: Menzies Lyth revisited -- CHAPTER TWO Beyond identifying social defences: "working through" and lessons from people whispering -- CHAPTER THREE A psycho-social perspective on social defences -- CHAPTER FOUR Social defences in the information age -- CHAPTER FIVE Defences against innovation: the conservation of vagueness -- CHAPTER SIX Reconceptualizing social defences for the purpose of organizational change: causes, consequences, and the contribution of cultural theory -- PART II Health and nursing -- CHAPTER SEVEN Reflections on Isabel Menzies Lyth in the light of developments in nursing care -- CHAPTER EIGHT "I'm beyond caring": a response to the Francis Report -- CHAPTER NINE Anxiety at the front line -- CHAPTER TEN A partnership of policing and health systems: containing the dynamics of sexual violence -- CHAPTER ELEVEN Running the gauntlet of institutional defence: from the prison gate to the hospital wing -- PART III The private sector -- CHAPTER TWELVE Extreme work environments: beyond anxiety and social defence -- CHAPTER THIRTEEN Corporate cultures and inner conflicts -- CHAPTER FOURTEEN Defences against anxiety in the law -- PART IV Social welfare and education -- CHAPTER FIFTEEN Spotlit: defences against anxiety in contemporary human service organizations -- CHAPTER SIXTEEN Still not good enough! Must try harder: an exploration of social defences in schools -- CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Work discussion groups as a container for sexual anxieties in schools -- CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Social defences in nurseries and the contemporary value of the concept.

CHAPTER NINETEEN Projective identification and unconscious defences against anxiety: social work education, practice learning, and the fear of failure -- CHAPTER TWENTY Unconscious defences against anxiety in a Youth Offending Service -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.

This book revisits the theory of social systems as a defence against anxiety first set out by Elliott Jaques and Isabel Menzies Lyth in papers which they published in 1955 and 1960, and which have been influential points of reference ever since. Menzies Lyth's study of the nursing system of a general hospital, with its roots in both psychoanalysis and socio-technical systems thinking, has remained one of the most convincing demonstrations of the influence of unconscious anxieties on social behaviour, and of their effects in inducing dysfunctional defensive systems in organisations. The theory of 'social defences against anxiety' remains one of the most significant contributions of the 'Tavistock school' to the study of human relations.Contributors explore this theory as a generative paradigm, capable both of theoretical extension and of empirical application to different institutional settings. They review changes which have taken place in the theoretical and social context since these ideas were first advanced, and assess what conceptual revisions these developments require. The relevance of Menzies Lyth's ideas to contemporary settings of health and nursing is examined, as is the value of these ideas in explaining anxieties and their concomitant social defences in the private sector and in various fields of public education and welfare. Finally, the book discusses some educational and therapeutic practices which have evolved at the Tavistock and elsewhere to 'contain' unconscious anxieties and to mitigate damaging forms of defence against them.Contributors to the book include writers distinguished for their contributions to the fields of organisational consultancy, to applied socio-psychoanalytic thought, and to research and professional practice in several fields.Contributors: Philip Boxer, Andrew Cooper, Maxim de Sauma, Peter Elfer, Marcus

Evans, Sarah Fielding, Jo Finch, William Halton, Larry Hirschorn, Paul Hoggett, Sharon Horowitz, Emil Jackson, Sebastian Kraemer, James Krantz, Debbie Langstaff, Amanda Lees, Susan Long, Aideen Lucey, Nick Papadopoulos, Jason Schaub, Mannie Sher, Jon Stokes, Simon Tucker, Liz Tutton, Anne Zachary.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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