Education
Territory graduated from the University of Michigan Medical School with an Doctor of Medicine.
( Why and how therapy with even the most challenging kids...)
Why and how therapy with even the most challenging kids can work. Terr presents highly effective child psychotherapeutic styles and techniques and demonstrates them in three ways: by relating “moments” from at least six of her own cases; by conveying and comparing “moments” from 33 of her distinguished colleagues’ cases; and by watching her “wild child” patient, little Cammie, develop her own eight “magical moments” over a period of fifteen years. These “moments” are rare. But by pooling them together, or by looking at how they develop over a long period of time in a single individual, readers are able to achieve further understanding of the process of change in child and adolescent psychotherapy.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0393705307/?tag=2022091-20
( Can a long-forgotten memory of a horrible event suddenl...)
Can a long-forgotten memory of a horrible event suddenly resurface years later? How can we know whether a memory is true or false? Seven spellbinding cases shed light on why it is rare for a reclaimed memory to be wholly false. Here are unforgettable true stories of what happens when people remember what they've tried to forget—plus one case of genuine false memory. In the best detective-story fashion, using her insights as a psychiatrist and the latest research on the mind and the brain, Lenore Terr helps us separate truth from fiction.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0465095399/?tag=2022091-20
Territory graduated from the University of Michigan Medical School with an Doctor of Medicine.
Territory"s book Too Scared to Cry (Basic, 1990) is divided into four parts focusing on the following aspects of childhood psychic trauma: emotions, mental work, behavior and treatment and contagion. Within this book she describes several cases that illustrate the troubling problem of children"s statements and behaviors that are based in factitious traumatic events. Within this book she details the results of her review of twenty pre-schoolers, and concludes that trauma suffered before the age of three years was rarely able to be fully described verbally, instead events were reenacted behaviorally.
She also draws on her interviews and follow-up with the victims of the 1976 Chowchilla kidnapping and with a number of similar children from surrounding towns, used as a control group.
Lastly, Territory notes the distinction between a single, sudden traumatic event as being clearly held in a child"s mind and subsequently accessible to verbal remembering, versus repetitive or prolonged trauma that severely compromises accurate verbal recall. Territory has also been actively involved in advocating the psychological theory of repressed memory - a controversial proposition which asserts people can recall memories which have been repressed, frequently because of trauma.
According to the theory, the memory can be suddenly recalled through visual or auditory stimuli and psychological therapeutic treatment. Territory was the primary expert witness for the prosecution in the criminal case of People v.
Franklin (1990) - wherein George Thomas Franklin was convicted by a jury in 1990 for the homicide of nine-year-old Susan Nason, a murder that took place more than 20 years previously near Foster City, California
The prosecution and ultimate conviction was based solely upon the supposed recovered memory of Franklin"s daughter, Eileen, who alleged she witnessed the murder and then for some reason repressed the memory for 21 years before suddenly recovering the memory of the murder and then reporting her recollection of the incident to the San Mateo County, California, sheriff"s department. Territory was the prosecution"s expert witness to support the theory of repressed memory and its corresponding recovery, which was instrumental in the conviction of Franklin. The conviction was later reversed by a federal appeals court, partially because so-called repressed memory is not acceptable as a contributing factor to conviction in a criminal proceeding.
George Franklin was later exonerated by deoxyribonucleic acid evidence collected at the crime scene, casting further doubt on the use of repressed memories in criminal trials.
( Can a long-forgotten memory of a horrible event suddenl...)
( Why and how therapy with even the most challenging kids...)