Panelists discuss Therapists' Religious Practices and Comfort With Lesbian and Gay Clients ; Permanent Change in Therapist Habitual Patterns ; Family Therapists’ Considerations of Web-based Technologies in Clinical Practice
The North Dakota State University program is particularly committed to preparing students to work with diverse and underserved populations, and is centered in a feminist and social justice framework.
Family Process is a peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary, international journal that publishes research, training and theoretical contributions in the broad areas of families, family therapy, systems theory and practice.
At the 2012 NCFR Annual Conference in Phoenix, we are sponsoring or cosponsoring an exciting array of workshops, roundtables, symposia, paper sessions, and posters.
A family court judge approached Professor and Marriage and Family Therapist Bill Doherty with an interesting observation: some of the divorcing couples the judge worked with were approaching the process with such high levels of cooperation, he wondered if their marriages were still, in fact, salvageable. This led to research and then the creation of the Couples on the Brink Project in Minnesota. The project trains therapists, collaborative lawyers and clergy to help couples on the brink of divorce who want to take a second look at their options for their marriage.
Former NCFR president, professor, and Marriage and Family Therapist Bill Doherty discusses the creation of the Couples on the Brink Project in Minnesota, which offers a new type of counseling to married couples considering divorce.