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Recovered Memories
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Table of Contents

About the Editors.

About the Contributors.

Introduction.

THE SOCIAL ASPECTS.

Socio-historical Perspective (T. Dalgleish & N. Morant).

Recovered Memories: Effects Upon the Family and Community (G. Gudjonsson).

Recovered Memories of Abuse: Effects on the Individual (A. Skinner).

Recovered Memories: The Legal Dilemmas (E. Magner & P. Parkinson).

EVIDENTIAL ASPECTS.

The Recovered Memories Controversy: Where Do We Go From Here? (D. Lindsay & J. Read).

Discovering Fact and Fiction: Case-based Analyses of Authentic and Fabricated Discovered Memories of Abuse (K. Shobe & J. Schooler).

Is It Possible to Discriminate True From False Memories? (G. Davies).

CLINICAL ASPECTS.

Therapeutic Techniques, Therapeutic Contexts and Memory (D. Bekerian & M. O'Neill).

Recovered Memories in Therapy Clinicians' Beliefs and Practices (B. Andrews).

Establishing Practice-based Guidelines for Therapists (N. Robertson).

Psychogenic Amnesias: Functional Memory Loss (M. Kopelman & J. Morton).

CONCLUDING COMMENTS.

Memories of Abuse and Alien Abduction: Close Encounters of a Therapeutic Kind (M. Power).

Author Index.

Subject Index.

About the Author

Graham Davies is a Professor of Psychology at Leicester University, England, UK. He is a Fellow of the British Psychological Society and a Chartered Forensic Psychologist. His major research interests lie in the eyewitness testimony of children and adults, on which he has published some 100 papers and five books. Graham is regularly asked to provide training and advice to professionals working with child witnesses. He is currently chairing the consortium working with the British Government's Home Office to revise the Memorandum of Good Practice on Video Recorded Interviews with Child Witnesses for Criminal Proceedings (1992). His recent research has included evaluations for the Home Office of the Live Link (1991), videotape facilities for child witnesses (1195), and training procedures for police officers involved in investigative interviewing of children (1997). Graham is the immediate past Chair of the Society of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition (SARMAC), and President-elect of the European Association of Psychology of Law.

Tim Dalgleish is the editor of Recovered Memories: Seeking the Middle Ground, published by Wiley.

Reviews

"...a fascinating, well researched book that is surprisingly well balanced given the highly emotive topic..." (Mental Health Today, September 2002) "...this book makes a significant contribution to this aim..." (Applied Cognitive Psychology, May 2003) "...I would strongly recommend this book...an engaging and thorough examination of this important subject..." (Journal of Behavioural & Cognitive Psychotherapy, No.1 and 2, 2005) "...I strongly recommend this book...a fascinating read..." (BACP, Dec 2005)

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