Handbook of Motivational Counseling - Goal-BasedApproaches to Assessment and Intervention withAddiction and Other Problems 2e
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More About This Title Handbook of Motivational Counseling - Goal-BasedApproaches to Assessment and Intervention withAddiction and Other Problems 2e

English

Revised and updated to reflect the most recent developments in the field, the second edition of the Handbook of Motivational Counseling presents comprehensive coverage of the development and identification of motivational problems and the most effective treatment techniques. 
  • Equips clinicians with specific instructions for enhancing clients’ motivation for change by targeting their maladaptive motivational patterns
  • Provides step-by-step instructions in the administration, scoring, and interpretation of the motivational assessments, along with details of how to implement the counseling procedures
  • Updated to reflect the most current research and effective treatment techniques, along with all-new chapters on motive-based approaches, motivational counseling with the dually diagnosed, cognitive and motivational retraining, meaning-centered counseling, and motivation in sport
  • Showcases various basic motivational techniques and their adaptations, such as bibliotherapy, individual therapy, and group counseling, while demonstrating specialized uses of the techniques, such as in work settings and rehabilitation medicine 

English

W. Miles Cox is Professor of Psychology of Addictive Behaviours at Bangor University. He is Founding Editor of the journal Psychology of Addictive Behaviors (APA) and Past President of the APA Division on Addictions. In 2004, Professor Cox received a Presidential Citation from Division 50 (Addictions) of the American Psychological Association for pioneering work on Psychology of Addictive Behaviors. A Fellow in the American Psychological Association and a Charter Fellow in the American Psychological Society, he has published widely, primarily in addictive behaviors. 

Eric Klinger is Professor of Psychology Emeritus at the University of Minnesota. He is a Fellow in the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Psychological Association, and a Charter Fellow of the American Psychological Society. Professor Klinger received the Henry A. Murray Award ‘for distinguished contributions to the study of lives’ from the Society for Personality and Social Psychology in 2005. He has published widely on issues related to motivation. 

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About the Editors.

Contributors.

Foreword by (Professor Peter E. Nathan).

Preface.

Note on the second edition.

Part I. Basic Concepts and Theories.

1. Motivation and the Goal Theory of Current Concerns (Eric Klinger and W. Miles Cox).

2. Behavioral Economics: Basic Concepts and Clinical Applications (Christopher J. Correia, James G. Murphy, and Leon H. Butler).

3. Personal Projects and Motivational Counseling: The Quality of Lives Reconsidered (Brian R. Little).

4. Goal Conflicts and Goal Integration: Theory, Assessment, and Clinical Implications (Johannes Michalak, Thomas Heidenreich, andJürgen Hoyer).

5. Touching a Person’s Essence: Using Implicit Motives as Personal Resources in Counseling (Philipp Alsleben and Julius Kuhl) .

6. A Motivational Model of Alcohol Use: Determinants of Use and Change (W. Miles Cox and Eric Klinger).

Part II. Assessment and Relationships to Behavior.

7. Measuring Motivation: The Motivational Structure Questionnaire, Personal Concerns Inventory, and their Variants (W. Miles Cox and Eric Klinger).

8. The Motivational Structure Questionnaire, Personal Concerns Inventory, and Their Variants: Psychometric Properties (Eric Klinger and W. Miles Cox).

9. Volitional and Emotional Correlates of the Motivational Structure Questionnaire: Further Evidence for Construct Validity (Nicola Baumann).

10. Offenders' Motivation: Measurement, Structure, and Content (Mary McMurran, Joselyn Sellen, and Jacqueline Campbell).

Part III. Systematic Motivational Counseling and Its Applications.

11. Systematic Motivational Counseling: From Motivational Assessment to Motivational Change (W. Miles Cox and Eric Klinger).

12. Systematic Motivational Counseling in Groups: Promoting Therapeutic Change through Client Interaction (Arno Fuhrmann, Bernhard M. Schroer, and Renate de Jong-Meyer).

13. Motivational Interventions for Substance Abusers with Psychiatric Illness (Suzette Glasner-Edwards).

14. Systematic Motivational Analysis as Part of a Self-Help Technique Aimed at Personal Goal Attainment (Renate de Jong-Meyer).

15. Systematic Motivational Counseling at Work: Improving Employee Performance, Satisfaction, and Socialization (Loriann Roberson and David M. Sluss).

16. Cognitive and Motivational Retraining: Reciprocal Effects (Javad Salehi Fadardi, Zohreh Sepehri Shamloo, and W. Miles Cox).

Part IV. Other Motivational Approaches to Changing Behavior.

17. Motivation in Sport: Theory and Application (Kevin A. Stefanek and Heather J. Peters).

18. The Elaboration of Positive Goal Perspectives (EPOS): An Intervention Module to Enhance Motivation (Ulrike WillutzkiandChristoph Koban).

19. Meaning-Centered Counseling and Therapy:  An Integrative and Comprehensive Approach to Motivational Counseling and Addiction Treatment (Paul T. P. Wong).

20. Changing Alcohol Expectancies and Self-Efficacy Expectations (Barry T. Jones and Ross McD. Young).

21. The Drinker’s Check-Up: A Brief Motivational Intervention for Early Stage Problem Drinkers (Maria J. Emmen, Gerard M. Schippers, Gijs Bleijenberg, and Hub Wollersheim).

22. Motivational Enhancement as a Brief Intervention for College Student Drinkers (Arthur W. Blume and G. Alan Marlatt).

23. Community Reinforcement Approach and Contingency Management Interventions for Substance Abuse (Maxine L. Stitzer, Conrad Wong, Hendree E. Jones, and Michelle Tuten).

24. Goal-Setting as a Motivational Technique for Neurorehabilitation (Siegfried Gauggel).

25. Motivational Interviewing in Health Promotion and Behavioral Medicine (Ken Resnicow and Stephen Rollnick).

Part V. Conclusions.

26. Taking Stock and Looking Ahead: A Toolkit for Motivational Counselors (W. Miles Cox and Eric Klinger).

Index.

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“It is comprehensively written by 43 experts from around the world. The main thrust is to deconstruct drinking behaviour into a motivational model.”  (Oxford Journals Clippings, 4 May 2012)

 

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