| | | AGPA13-213-5 | | Gender Rights in Groups & Societies: The Int’l Perspective Speakers: Dena Baumgartner, Giovanna Cantarella, Galabina Petrova Tarashoeva, Michael Wieser | | MP3 | | $12.00 | | $12.00 | |
| | | AGPA13-211-5 | | Manualization: The Gold Road to Group Therapy Practice Speakers: Sharan Schwartzberg, Bernhard Strauss, Co-Chairs; Andrea Grunblatt, Kenneth Martin Schwartz | | MP3 | | $12.00 | | $12.00 | |
| | | APSA_NY13-403 | | Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience Symposium Speakers: Charles P. Fisher, Mark Solms Dr. Solms presents a compelling thesis that “turns the talking cure on its head” while preserving Freud’s fundamental discoveries. Freud saw the ego as the seat of consciousness and the id as deeply unconscious. However modern neuroscience suggests that consciousness is generated in primitive brain structures that mediate instinctual drives, while the higher structures that represent the external world are unconscious in themselves. Is the id conscious and the ego unconscious? This revision would resolve certain difficulties with Freud’s original formulations, while reinforcing the clinical utility of his basic concepts. The group discusses how this revised model clarifies clinical work. | | MP3 | | $10.00 | | $10.00 | |
| | | NPSG13-103 | | Equity as the New Model for Growth: How Three Regions are Innovating Speakers: Ramon Leon, Executive Director, Latino Economic Development Corporation; Allen Fernandez Smith, President & CEO, Urban Habitat; Pamela Hurtt, Senior Consultant, New Economy Initiative for Southeast Michigan Tomorrow’s successful regions will be those that adopt equity-driven growth strategies, creating greater opportunities for residents left behind after the past few decades of unequal growth. Doing so means squarely addressing race: in many metros, the majority of residents are people of color, yet Latinos, African Americans, Native Americans and other racial/ethnic groups continue to face stark barriers to economic participation and success. A handful of regions are taking bold steps to integrate equity into their economic development pursuits. This session highlights three of them: Detroit’s New Economy Initiative, which is implanting inclusion strategies into its small business accelerators focused on high-tech companies, anchor institutions, and neighborhood-serving businesses; the Twin Cities’ “Everybody In” effort to reduce the region’s high racial disparities in employment; and the Bay Area’s sustainable communities strategy to connect the region’s low-income communities and communities of color to its high-growth industries. | | MP3 | | $10.00 | | $10.00 | |