GAPS National Conference "Social Work and Trauma – Context, Theory and Relationship-Based Practice"

Ticket sales have ended

Ticket sales have now ended.

GAPS National Conference "Social Work and Trauma – Context, Theory and Relationship-Based Practice"

By GAPS

Date and time

Fri, 4 Oct 2019 09:30 - 16:30 GMT+1

Location

St Mary's Conference Centre

Bramall Lane Sheffield S2 4QZ United Kingdom

Refund Policy

Contact the organiser to request a refund.

Description

Our conference is a chance to feel nourished and energised within a community of like-minded people from across the field of Social Work. There will be opportunities to reflect and connect through facilitated group discussion. We will provide a delicious hot vegetarian lunch and refreshments throughout the day.

We are delighted to be welcoming our keynote speakers Professor Andrew Cooper (The Tavistock and Portman) and Trauma specialist, Kati Taunt. We will also be joined by socio-dramatist Valerie Mont Holland who will help explore our conference theme through interaction.

Andrew Cooper: 'Optimism of the will...' Suffering, trauma, hope and the heart of social work.'

Our society is traversing massive upheaval. Unhappily the prospects for social work and the communities we relate to are unlikely to be favourable. Everyday working life is already extremely testing for most practitioners. Drawing on personal, professional and practitioner experience I want to consider what kind of leadership individuals and organisations like GAPS might be called on to offer in the coming period. To do this I believe we must understand the role of social work in society more accurately and incisively than we presently do.

Social workers routinely engage with painful transitions, conflicts and trauma in the lives of individuals, families and communities, working within organisations that often fail to protect and sustain us in the face of these tasks. Social suffering, anxiety, existential dilemmas and conflicts are at the core of what we engage with each day but I also ask us to take care with the word 'trauma' in order not to devalue it.

Relationship based practice is the only really effective and meaningful response to the demands of our job, including trauma. But what does it consist of when the problems our service users face, and the organisational difficulties we struggle with are so evidently both individual and systemic, private and also public, personal and political?

Social work must be a hopeful, progressive endeavour, but also a realistic one. I hope to engender hope in these difficult times by articulating a vision of social work that embodies something of Gramsci's famous saying, 'Pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will.'

About Andrew Cooper: Andrew Cooper is Professor of Social Work at the Tavistock Centre, a psychoanalytic therapist and practising clinical social worker in the Adolescent Family Therapy service at the Tavistock. He has written widely about relationship based practice and the politics of social work and welfare provision. He is a former editor of the Journal of Social Work Practice and founded the Centre for Social Work Practice of which he is now a patron.

Kati Taunt: The Impact of Traumatic Childhood Experiences

Kati will introduce the growing body of thought around the impact of early trauma on the developing brain and the effects across a life time of traumatic experiences that occur in childhood. The second part of Kati's contribution to the day will look at what happens when social work encounters are infused with past trauma, and how we might helpfully contribute in these interactions.

About Kati Taunt : Kati is a registered social worker, systemic practitioner, cognitive behavioural therapist and EMDR practitioner with 25 years of experience working in residential childcare and specialist child and adolescent mental health services. SHe has always specialised in trauma and in working with children looked after. She is a licenced ARC (Attachment, Regulation and Competency) trainer, licenced by the Boston Trauma Centre. USA. Kati has been working to introduce trauma informed practice into schools, residential care, foster care, youth offending, adolescent psychiatric in patient services and CAMHS teams in a locations throughout the UK.

Valerie Monti Holland is a sociodramatist whose own narrative began in Philadelphia as an actor, director and facilitator. Her passion for devising theatre with groups led her to study Applied Theatre and Sociodrama and Action Methods and a career using creative techniques in prisons, schools and organizations across the public, private and voluntary sectors.

Organised by

GAPS is a registered charity promoting relationship-based approaches, and psychodynamic and systemic thinking in social work. We receive an income from our ownership of the Journal of Social Work Practice which we use to fund activities for front-line social work practitioners and managers – such as one-day workshops and seminars, as well as our annual essay award for social work practitioners and students.  

In 1980s, a group of social workers interested in working with psychodynamic ideas established GAPS (Group for the Advancement of Psychodynamics and Psychotherapy in Social Work) and the Journal of Social Work Practice. Since that time, GAPS has promoted the importance of relationship-based approaches in social work, and therapeutic, psychodynamic and systemic perspectives – perspectives that are central to the editorial policy of the Journal of Social Work Practice, which is owned by the GAPS membership.

Journal of Social Work PracticeThis ISI ranked, refereed Journal publishes four issues each year and, as such, it is one of the few social work journals that is centrally concerned with promoting the importance of working therapeutically with the children and adults. The Journal has a wide international readership and editorial correspondents, and attracts regular contributions from abroad. Every issue includes papers that are drawn from a wide spectrum of therapeutic interest, including book reviews, commentaries and conceptual themes that explore psychodynamic and therapeutic ideas and ways of working. Also, the Journal regularly publishes special editions where the focus is on specific themes - such as the importance of relationship-based approaches; the importance and impact of defences in social work; work with children; work with adults; etc. The Journal is published and distributed by Taylor and Francis; members are sent four copies of the Journal a year, and can also access a range of other benefits and resources.

If you have a question or would like more information about GAPS or our events, please get in contact with the Project Co-ordinator, Hannah Pepper by email hannahpepper@gaps.org.uk or by phone 07714 237107

Sales Ended