Stephen Blumenthal is Consultant Clinical Psychologist and Psychoanalyst at the Portman Clinic, Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, and in private practice. Heather Wood is Consultant Clinical Psychologist and Adult Psychotherapist, formerly at the Portman Clinic, Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, and in private practice. Andrew Williams is Consultant Psychiatrist in Forensic Psychotherapy and Psychoanalyst at the Portman Clinic, Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, and in private practice.
At last! An authoritative and accessible book that integrates psychoanalytical thinking with current approaches to evidence-based risk assessment. This volume is packed with interesting case vignettes, and explains complex ideas with compelling clarity; essential reading for the practitioner working with violent offenders. Dr Jackie Craissati, MBE, Consultant Clinical & Forensic Psychologist and Director of Psychological Approaches CIC Thank goodness we have thinkers such as Drs Blumenthal, Wood and Williams... In their seminal book, Risk: A Relational Perspective, they begin to integrate the insights from psychoanalysis-the narrative thread of attachment, the unconscious defences of the patient, and the enormous value of countertransference in the clinician-with the actuarial, and mostly phenomenal science of contemporary risk assessment. Dr J. Reid Meloy, PhD, Clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine Forensic mental health is riven by polarities: mad v bad, sane v insane, treatment v punishment etc. What a pleasure then to find a book that seeks to integrate 'hard science' actuarial data on risk with 'soft science' psychoanalytic thought. The latter provides the authors with a meaning behind what otherwise often appears as inexplicable or bizarre behaviour. The authors argue that the exploration of this meaning with a client, while being informed by the relevant actuarial data, ought to reduce future violence thereby benefiting the client, the assessor and society more broadly. Conor Duggan, OBE, Emeritus Professor, Division of Psychiatry and Applied Psychology, University of Nottingham