Book contents
- Social Scaffolding
- Social Scaffolding
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Note
- Section 1 Schooling
- Section 2 Scoping
- Section 3 Sourcing
- Chapter 15 Crowds and Cooperation
- Chapter 16 Emergencies, Disasters and Risk Reduction: A Microcosm of Social Relationships in Communities
- Chapter 17 Shared Social Identity in Emergencies, Disasters and Conflicts
- Chapter 18 Complex Trauma and Complex Responses to Trauma in the Asylum Context
- Chapter 19 The Mental Health of Veterans: Ticking Time Bomb or Business as Usual?
- Chapter 20 Violent Radicalisation: Relational Roots and Preventive Implications
- Chapter 21 Ways Out of Intractable Conflict
- Chapter 22 Agency as a Source of Recovery and Creativity
- Section 4 Scaffolding
- Section 5 Sustaining
- Index
- References
Chapter 18 - Complex Trauma and Complex Responses to Trauma in the Asylum Context
from Section 3 - Sourcing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 June 2019
- Social Scaffolding
- Social Scaffolding
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Note
- Section 1 Schooling
- Section 2 Scoping
- Section 3 Sourcing
- Chapter 15 Crowds and Cooperation
- Chapter 16 Emergencies, Disasters and Risk Reduction: A Microcosm of Social Relationships in Communities
- Chapter 17 Shared Social Identity in Emergencies, Disasters and Conflicts
- Chapter 18 Complex Trauma and Complex Responses to Trauma in the Asylum Context
- Chapter 19 The Mental Health of Veterans: Ticking Time Bomb or Business as Usual?
- Chapter 20 Violent Radicalisation: Relational Roots and Preventive Implications
- Chapter 21 Ways Out of Intractable Conflict
- Chapter 22 Agency as a Source of Recovery and Creativity
- Section 4 Scaffolding
- Section 5 Sustaining
- Index
- References
Summary
Both the authors are clinicians who work at the Helen Bamber Foundation (HBF), a human rights charity that works with asylum seekers and refugees who have experienced extreme violations of their human rights.
Since she entered the Bergen Belsen concentration camp in May 1945, only a few weeks after its liberation, our Founder, Helen Bamber, worked continuously for nearly 70 years as a pioneer in the documentation of extreme human cruelty and in assessing the needs and providing comprehensive care for survivors of extreme cruelty. Helen’s overwhelming sense of mission and of duty were closely linked to her early experiences at Bergen Belsen, which also provided a starting point for her notion of integrated care. She spoke of bearing witness, through the detailed documentation of the mental and physical evidence of the cruelty to which her clients had been subjected, which are cornerstones of the model of integrated care.
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- Information
- Social ScaffoldingApplying the Lessons of Contemporary Social Science to Health and Healthcare, pp. 165 - 171Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019