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HUMAN GIVENS JOURNAL
Back Issue: Volume 13, No. 2 — 2006
Editorial: Strange behaviours — Read
How We Are: news, views and information
Preventing suicide • appearance and memory • antidepressants —
surprising findings • hunger and learning • DNA and depression •
abstract symbols • educating looked-after children • predicting violent
behaviour, wrongly • depressed mothers • the extreme autistic brain •
creative thinking • what you focus on is what you get • male and female
anxiety after stillbirth • helpful chimpanzees • checking behaviour •
eating disorders • control at work • friends who care
A question of identity
Pat Williams muses on the familiar fear of nothingness
Common ground: diplomacy and the human givens
John Bell argues that only a needs-based conflict-resolution approach
can bring peace to the Middle East
Struggling for meaning
‘Nominalisations’ can manipulate and mislead – yet they also
sometimes enhance understanding. By Gwen Griffith-Dickson
Escape from the box and the bottomless pit
Gareth Evans describes how working with young people’s own metaphors
can help them find solutions to problems
“Got to be thin”
Grace Bowman talks to Denise Winn about the gripping experience of
anorexia and how she overcame it
Matter as well as mind
Christine Blakey says that poor nutrition can very often cause
psychological symptoms
From self-harm to self-belief
Emily Lindsey-Clarke describes the role of the human givens approach
in her work with women with complex needs
Book Reviews
Letters
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