Personality Disorders in Modern Life
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More About This Title Personality Disorders in Modern Life

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THEODORE MILLON, PhD, DSc, has recently held positions as a professor in the Psychiatry Department of Harvard Medical School and Professor of Psychology at the University of Miami. He is currently Dean of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Personology and Psychopathology. Founder and co-Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Personality Disorders for the past ten years, he is also past president of the International Society for the Study of Personality Disorders. Dr. Millon is the prime author of several self-report inventories (MCMI-III, MACI, MBHI, MIPS). Among his books are Disorders of Personality: DSM-IV and Beyond, Second Edition; Toward a New Personology: An Evolutionary Model; Personality-Guided Therapy; The Millon Inventories; and a collection of his seminal papers entitled Personality and Psychopathology: Building a Clinical Science.

ROGER DAVIS, PhD, has been a postdoctoral fellow and is currently Director of Research at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Personology and Psychopathology. His recent publications include "The Five-Factor Model for Personality Disorder: Apt or Misguided?" and "The Importance of Theory to a Taxonomy of Personality Disorders." He is coauthor of Disorders of Personality: DSM-IV and Beyond, Second Edition.

English

Personality Disorders: Current Concepts and Classical Foundations.

Contemporary Perspectives.

Assessment and Therapy of the Personality Disorders.

The Antisocial Personality.

The Avoidant Personality.

The Obsessive-Compulsive Personality.

The Dependent Personality.

The Histrionic Personality.

The Narcissistic Personality.

The Schizoid Personality.

The Schizotypal Personality.

The Paranoid Personality.

The Borderline Personality.

Personality Disorders from the Appendix of DSM-IV.

Personality Disorders from the Appendix of DSM-III-R.

References.

Indexes.

English

"William James would certainly consider Personality Disorders in Modern Life a fine tribute to mark the end of the first century of the scientific study of personality disorders. It is an exemplary book to usher in the next century of research and developments in the exciting and ever-changing field of personality disorders." (Contemporary Psychology, 10/01)

"...you should certainly read what Millon has to say about the personality disorders." (Behavioural & Cognitive Psychotherapy, January 2001)

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