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Conflict, Peace and Mental Health: Addressing the Consequences of Conflict and Trauma in Northern Ireland

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Conflict, Peace and Mental Health: Addressing the Consequences of Conflict and Trauma in Northern Ireland

Contributors:

By (Author) David Bolton

ISBN:

9780719090998

Publisher:

Manchester University Press

Imprint:

Manchester University Press

Publication Date:

13th June 2017

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Dewey:

363.3251

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

232

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm

Description

What are the human consequences of conflict and what are the appropriate service responses This book seeks to provide an answer to these important questions, drawing on over twenty-five years of work by the author in Northern Ireland and elsewhere. Focusing on the work undertaken following the Omagh bombing, the book describes how needs were ass

Reviews

The author writes from the heart, with the experience of a highly respected practitioner and researcher, and with a very personal yet professional relationship with victims and survivors.
Rev. Harold Good, Former President of the Methodist Church in Ireland and witness to the decommissioning of the IRA and ETA weaponry.

This is a magnificent contribution not just to the British/Irish troubles but to every region and every country where the agony and horror of violence has penetrated and mangled the human spirit.
Denis Bradley, Co-Chair Consultative Group on the Past

This is a book full of civility, humanism and evidence in relation to the psychological consequences of societal violence.
Brendan Bunting, Professor of Psychology, Ulster University

David Bolton writes with insight in this admirable book. I have rarely encountered an individual so committed and dedicated to making the ragged edges of peace less painful.
David McKittrick, co-author of Lost Lives, the compilation of Troubles related deaths in Northern Ireland.

David Bolton brings over 30 years of field experience in Northern Ireland to this book through which he shares his insights of conflict-related trauma and recovery, supported with empirical research evidence, with all humanitarians working in conflicted societies.
Fergus Cooper OBE, Former Save the Children Head of Country, in Northern Ireland

If there is one book that should be required reading for our MLAs, it is [this]. The book is a timely reminder that while the Assembly remains suspended and political progress remains stalled, victims and survivors of violence continue to live with the consequences of the pastThe book is also designed to appeal to an international audience. There is much to be learned and applied from the examples of good practice developed in the aftermath of Omagh and in the research/evidence-based approach of the partnership between NICTT and Ulster UniversityI am heartened that people in other parts of the world may learn from those who have suffered in Northern Ireland. But I hope that the learning in Northern Ireland itself has not stopped, and that our politicians and policy makers heed Boltons message about what remains to be done.
Gladys Ganiel, Slugger Otoole, October 2017

What prompted Bolton to write the book was the conflict in Syria and, before that, in Iraq. He hopes it will be of use to counsellors and psychiatrists and psychotherapists and anyone trying to deal with the traumatic impact of conflict.
Gerry Moriarty, Irish Times, August 2017

This is a timely book to remind us what happens when we dontnourish peace or build public infrastructures to ensure that violence andinjustice cannot succeed. It is timely not only because of recent events inNorthern Ireland that might evoke divisions from the past, but also because ofrecent events in London and Manchester, hate crime, and the shortcomings ofdemocratic voting- not to mention also the importance of looking now at theintergenerational problems that await the people in Syria and other Middle EastCountries.
Dr Derek Indoe Consultant Clinical and Forensic Psychologist,British Journal of Psychology

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Author Bio

David Bolton is a trauma researcher, writer and practitioner

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