ABSTRACT

Cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) is an established form of integrated psychotherapy, which has been applied in a variety of clinical settings to a diversity of disorders with promising outcomes. In Cognitive Analytic Therapy for Offenders, the authors describe the application of CAT to forensic settings, illustrating the use of this type of therapy with a range of offence types and clinical disorders.

CAT is presented as a new form of forensic psychotherapy which can enhance the understanding, conceptualisation, treatment and management of offenders. The book offers a novel description of clinical practice and describes the innovative application of cognitive analytic therapy to forensic work in a variety of contexts and settings for numerous offence types and clinical disorders, including:

  • CAT in the treatment of child sex offenders in secure forensic settings
  • the use of CAT with women in secure settings
  • CAT for parents within prisons
  • CAT for borderline and psychopathic personality disorder
  • CAT for a stalking offender
  • community-based CAT with perpetrators of domestic violence
  • CAT for homicide perpetrators (rage-type, serial sexual, dissociative homicides)
  • the application of CAT for Court reporting and managing boundary violations.

This book provides an account of a fresh, new approach to conceptualisation and treatment in forensic psychotherapy, and offers the first description of CAT presented in the form of a compilation of illustrations of practice. It will be essential reading for clinical psychologists and psychiatrists, occupational therapists, and anyone who works within services for offenders.

chapter Chapter 1|42 pages

Cognitive Analytic Therapy applied to offending

Theory, tools and practice

chapter Chapter 2|23 pages

From theory to practice

Cognitive Analytic Therapy for an arsonist with borderline personality disorder

chapter Chapter 5|18 pages

Stifled fantasies and the stalker’s obsessions:

Cognitive Analytic Therapy for a misguided lover

chapter Chapter 9|13 pages

A Cognitive Analytic Therapy-informed model of the therapeutic community

Implications for work in forensic settings

chapter Chapter 11|12 pages

Community-based Cognitive Analytic Therapy with perpetrators of domestic violence

Challenges to the orthodoxy

chapter Chapter 13|14 pages

Adam and Eve in the forensic Eden

Boundary violations in forensic practice

chapter Chapter 14|21 pages

Cognitive Analytic Therapy analysis of the errant self and serial sexual homicide

An encounter with the extremes of human conduct

chapter Chapter 15|10 pages

A case of dissociative murder

chapter Chapter 17|20 pages

Fragile states and fixed identities

Using Cognitive Analytic Therapy to understand aggressive men in relational and societal terms

chapter Chapter 18|8 pages

In the light of experience

chapter Chapter 19|4 pages

Final thoughts

The way forward for Cognitive Analytic Therapy in forensic settings