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         Ecopsychology:     more books (23)
  1. Ecopsychology: Restoring the Earth, Healing the Mind
  2. Sight and Sensibility : The Ecopsychology of Perception by Laura Sewall, 1999-10-04
  3. The Voice of the Earth: An Exploration of Ecopsychology by Theodore Roszak, 2001-12-01
  4. Radical Ecopsychology: Psychology in the Service of Life (Suny Series in Radical Social and Political Theory) by Andy Fisher, 2002-02-21
  5. Ecopsychology by Vladimir Antonov, 2008-09-27
  6. The Web of Life Imperative: Regenerative Ecopsychology Techniques that Help People Think in Balance with Natural Systems by Ed.D Michael J. Cohen, 2003-06-16
  7. Out of the Shadow: Ecopsychology, Story, and Encounters with the Land (Under the Sign of Nature: Explorations in Ecocriticism) by Rinda West, 2007-11-01
  8. Ecopsychology as Ultimate Force Psychology by Jorge Conesa Ph.D. Sevilla, 2006-10-25
  9. Environmental Psychology: Wayfinding, Human Factors, Cognitive Ergonomics, Ecopsychology, Behavioral Geography, Ecological Psychology, Socio-architecture, ... Ecology, Architecture, Behavioural Sciences.
  10. Cultural Ecopsychology: Displacement and The Urban African American Community by Jeanine M. Canty, 2000-01-01
  11. Out of the Shadow: Ecopsychology, Story, and Encounters with the Land.(Book review): An article from: MELUS by Tom J. Hillard, 2009-06-22
  12. THE VOICE OF THE EARTH An Exploration of Ecopsychology by Theodore Roszak, 1993
  13. Sight &_Sensibility :: The Ecopsychology of Perception by Lsurs Sewsl, 1999
  14. Stewards of Spirit: Awakening in the Light of Rachel's Ballads by Gianetta Ellis, 2007-05-08

61. First Ecopsychology Workshop Conducted In Dominica
First ecopsychology Workshop Conducted in Dominica.
http://www.thedominican.net/articles/terri.htm
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Volume No. 1 Issue No. 80 - Monday April 24, 2006 First Ecopsychology Workshop Conducted in Dominica
Terri Henry
Recently, Dominica’s first Ecopsychology workshop was successfully conducted by local Dominican Terri Henry in Castle Bruce on the forested site of the forthcoming ‘Richmond Bay Ecolodge’ project. The one-of-a-kind workshop was commissioned by EDSA, the largest ecotourism planning and ecolodge design firm in the world and was attended by Hitesh Mehta Project Manager and the worlds leading authority in Ecolodge design and planning. Also participating were other EDSA employees, a local architect, project clients and investors.
This unique workshop was specifically created to help the planners, designers and project investors increase their appreciation of the forest ecosystem and develop a connectedness with the land that in turn would bring a greater sensitivity to their planning.

62. Shamanism, Ecopsychology, Indigenous People - Nierica Compadres
Links related to shamanism and/or the work and vision of Tomás Pinkson and the Wakan Community. ecopsychology and indigenous peoples, cybershamanism,
http://www.nierica.com/lodge/index.html
The purpose of The Lodge is to provide relatives (in this context, relatives refers to all people because, in the Great Circle of Life, we are all related) Link Categories
Shamanism
Indigenous People Ecopsychology Compadres ...
Shamanic books, tapes, products
Shamanism Links
The Deoxyribonucleic Hyperdimension Shamanism pages The Lycaeum World's Largest Online Entheogenic Library and Community Lila : Journal of Cosmic Play (www.lila.info) is an evolving website themed around shamanism, ethnobotany, new paradigms, and visionary art. Every month Lila introduces a new visionary artist or researcher, with an overview of their work, upcoming projects, and an interview. Contributors to Lila have included Professor Michael Winkelman, Dr Stanislav Grof, the ethnobotanist Morgan Brent, ecopsychologist John Seed, Australian writer Julian Palmer, and many more. Lila contains a good amount of original content and also significant research that has appeared in print but never before online.
Indigenous Peoples
http://www.peyotepeople.com/

63. Akamai University - Applied Ecopsychology
Study options at Akamai University include Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy in Applied ecopsychology with concentrations in applied ecopsychology,
http://www.akamaiuniversity.us/AppliedEcopsychology.html
About Akamai Search Degree Programs Contacts Site Links Home All About Akamai Faculty Prospective Students ... Enroll Now Akamai Journals
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APPLIED ECOPSYCHOLOGY AND INTEGRATED ECOLOGY
Introduction

Primary Faculty

Degree Requirements

Course Descriptions
...
EcoPsychology Affiliations

Study options at Akamai University include Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy in Applied Ecopsychology with concentrations in applied ecopsychology, integrated ecology, natural science education, environmental ethics, philosophy of conservation, organic psychology, and interdisciplinary studies. Free Course Offering
Nature Appreciation Scholarship
Orientation Course Theoretical Paper ... The Web of Life Imperative PRIMARY FACULTY Michael J. Cohen, Ed.D. Program Director Dr. Cohen is an ecopsychologist, and founder of Project NatureConnect, a popular distance learning program with extended education workshops and online course offerings. NatureConnect is a program of The Institute of Global Education, a special NGO consultant to the United Nations Economic and Social Council. Dr. Cohen has established and directed degree programs in environmental outdoor education for the National Audubon Society, Lesley College, and the Trailside Country School. He chairs the Department of Integrated Ecology on San Juan Island, Washington, the location from which he networks his Natural Systems Thinking Process worldwide. Dr. Cohen has authored many books and articles including

64. SpiritMoving
SpiritMoving Selene Vega, M.A., L.M.F.T.. Home Workshops Writing Resources About Selene Skyote Mountain Contact
http://www.spiritmoving.com/
SpiritMoving
Selene Vega, M.A., L.M.F.T. Moving and dancing alone and together, we can connect deeply with ourselves, with each other, with earth, with spirit. Our relationships with our bodies are reflected in our relationship with the world around us. Coming to sacred ground in the body, searching beneath our conditioned ways of being, paying attention to our bodies’ messages, we can open ourselves to new ways to move and play, dance and celebrate, open our spirits to move in the world. Explore within
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65. Ecopsychologist Uses Interdisciplinary Approach
New England Psychologist s Catherine Robertson Souter, recently spoke to the selfproclaimed ecopsychologist, who now works hard to bring a sense of that
http://www.masspsy.com/leading/0211_ne_qa.html
Ecopsychologist uses interdisciplinary approach...
(November 2002 Issue)
Humans are living out of touch with the natural world. We move from air conditioned cars to office buildings with music piped into elevators. Seasons change but our experience with the world does not - the temperature remains at a comfortable 70 degrees inside insulated buildings. Some individuals believe that this loss of connection with the seasons, with nature and with our own inner cycle affects us far more than we realize. More than 20 years ago, feeling that her office space practice left something vital out of her world and her clients' treatment, Lesley Shore, Ph.D., addressed the issue by moving her practice to a 23-acre farm in Medfield, MA. New England Psychologist's Catherine Robertson Souter, recently spoke to the self-proclaimed ecopsychologist, who now works hard to bring a sense of that missing connection to her clients. Q: What is an ecopsychologist?

66. Ecopsychologist Hopes That Individuals And World Re-connect
Jobs, CEs and news for Massachusetts Psychologists.
http://www.nepsy.com/leading/0604_ne_qa.html
Ecopsychologist hopes that individuals and
world re-connect
(April 2006 Issue)
The idea that man has cut himself off from his natural-world roots is not a new notion. Experts have pointed out that we are not designed to sit at a computer under fluorescent lights all day. We are not designed to eat constantly or stay indoors nearly all of our lives. These are changes that have occurred only during the smallest fraction of man's existence and changes that we have not evolved to cope with. It should not be surprising, therefore, that humans feel a sort of disconnectedness from the world around them and that that disconnection would manifest itself psychologically. The field of ecopsychology is all about helping the individual and the world as a whole to re-connect. It's an area that seems well suited to clinical psychology yet there are not many who are doing this type of work. That situation may change as these ideas gain more widespread acceptance. Future psychology students may be shocked to learn how we once treated individuals as just that, alone in their pain or pathology. While most in the field live in the Western states, one prominent ecopsychologist is Sarah Conn, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist with a private practice in Arlington, Mass. Along with her husband, Lane Conn, Ph.D., she co-founded The Ecopsychology Institute in Cambridge, a group of psychologists and other professionals who design ways to collaborate with other professions and environmental groups.

67. Eco-Psychology: Jeffrey Mishlove Interviews Theodore Roszak
In your book The Voice of the Earth, you outline what hopefully will become an entirely new discipline which you call ecopsychology.
http://www.williamjames.com/transcripts/roszak.htm
THINKING ALLOWED
Conversations On The Leading Edge
Of Knowledge and Discovery
With Dr. Jeffrey Mishlove
ECO-PSYCHOLOGY
With THEODORE ROSZAK
Hello and welcome. I'm Jeffrey Mishlove. Today we are going to explore echo-psychology. With me for the first of a three part series is Dr. Theodore Roszak, a professor of history at California State University at Hayward, a leading social critic and an author of numerous books including The Making of a Counterculture, Where the Wasteland Ends, Person, Planet, and most recently , The Voice of the Earth. Welcome Ted. TR: Good to be here Jeff. JM: It's a pleasure to be with you. In your book The Voice of the Earth, you outline what hopefully will become an entirely new discipline which you call eco-psychology. I think the best way to introduce our viewers to this subject is to talk about what psychology has been up until now. And I think maybe the best place to start would be with Freud himself who was the founder of psychotherapy. TR: That's where I decided to start the examination of the psychiatric mainstream. It provides a good baseline. As Freud, whatever else has to be questioned and revised his work as most of the important questions. And even though I disagree with many answers he came up with, I thought the questions where well worth addressing. And so I used Freud and his influence on later figures, positive or negative, as a starting point for a reexamination and a revisioning of the psychiatric tradition in the modern Western world. JM: Well, one of the issues that Freud did address was the environment itself in some very limited sense wasn't it?

68. Shamanism & Eco-Psychology
Excerpts of Shamanism and EcoPsychology Ancient Answers for Contemporary Concerns, Leslie Gray s CUUPS Keynote Address given at the 1995 General
http://www.woodfish.org/shameco.html
Leslie Gray:
Excerpts of "Shamanism and Eco-Psychology: Ancient Answers for Contemporary Concerns," Leslie Gray's CUUPS Keynote Address given at the 1995 General Assembly in Spokane, Washington. Of Oneida and Seminole heritage, Leslie Gray practices as a clinical psychologist and shamanic counselor.
My purpose tonight in speaking is to suggest that the re-inclusion of the ancient world view expressed in the American Indian statement "all my relations" is precisely our greatest hope for the future, ecologically and psychologically. I'll say a little bit about the situation we are in. I would describe it as nothing less than imminent global catastrophe. Ecocide if you will. As a species we are destroying our life support systems. The air is becoming increasingly unbreathable. The hole in the ozone grows larger. Water becomes undrinkable, the oceans are dying, the soil is eroded and turning non-arable. Toxic nuclear waste is leaking into all three elements just mentioned from unthinking, short sighted attempts to harness the fourth element, fire. No one escapes the daily recitation of the facts of planetary destruction in the media. They are voluminous. But whether it is the loss of a hundred species to our ecosystem a day or the destruction of old growth forests equal to the area of Pennsylvania each year or even the information that due to pesticides sperm counts of American males today are 50% that of their grandfathers, we seem to respond to these facts with denial, repression or despair rather than conscious action. Although planetary restoration is still possible, no one expects modern science or conventional state religions to turn this situation around. Indeed, many leading edge thinkers are coming to the conclusion that it is only through the formation of an empathic relationship with the Earth that we will survive. This is what eco-psychologists are saying.

69. Eco-Psychology
²EcoPsychology? ²Project Narrative. ²Introduction. ²Land Biomes. ~ Chaparral. ~ Desert. ~ Grassland. ~ Taiga. ~ Temperate Forest. ~ Tropical Rain Forest
http://www.geocities.com/eco_psychology/
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70. Footprint | Courses
Professional Development Courses. Footprint offer a programme of tailormade professional development courses which are recognised internationally for being
http://www.footprintconsulting.org/courses/index.html
home
Professional Development Courses
Footprint offer a programme of tailor-made professional development courses which are recognised internationally for being highly innovative and unique. We do not offer individual places on course but run them for groups of between 8 - 12 participants at a variety of venues - or at your own venue.
Ecotherapy: Working with the Healing Power of Wild Places
This outdoor-based programme brings outdoor education and psychotherapy together. Working alongside each other, a highly respected psychotherapist and a qualified and experienced outdoor educator work with a group of people to explore ways of working in wild and outdoor spaces for the healing benefit of both the human individual and the planet as a whole. This is where personal healing meets sustainable living, where the connection is made so that personal fulfilment and growth as a human being are functions of living within the Earth’s systems of life. more...
Outdoor Education for Sustainability
This is Footprint’s ‘flagship’ course, the development of which provided the model and inspiration for all our work.
The format combines indoor and outdoor sessions with a three day journey in a wilderness area, including a 24 hour solo.

71. Dr. Leslie Gray - Shamanism And Eco-Psychology
Indeed the slogan of the ecopsychology movement has become ecology needs psychology and psychology needs ecology. I think at its best, eco-psychology says
http://www.didjeridu.com/wickedsticks/voices/leslie.htm
Ancient Answers for Contemporary Concerns: Shamanism and Eco-Psychology
The following text is excerpted from Leslie Gray's Keynote Address given at the 1995 General Assembly of Unitarians in Spokane, Washington. Of Oneida and Seminole heritage and adopted by the Australian Aboriginal Gumatj Clan of NE Arnhem Land, Leslie Gray practices as a clinical psychologist and shamanic counselor in San Francisco, Ca. She is the director of Woodfish Institute a non-profit indigenous educational organization. For further information please contact Woodfish Institute
"My purpose tonight in speaking is to suggest that the re-inclusion of the ancient world view expressed in the American Indian statement "all my relations" is precisely our greatest hope for the future, ecologically and psychologically. I'll say a little bit about the situation we are in. I would describe it as nothing less than imminent global catastrophe. Ecocide if you will. As a species we are destroying our life support systems. The air is becoming increasingly unbreathable. The hole in the ozone grows larger. Water becomes undrinkable, the oceans are dying, the soil is eroded and turning non-arable. Toxic nuclear waste is leaking into all three elements just mentioned from unthinking, short sighted attempts to harness the fourth element, fire.
No one escapes the daily recitation of the facts of planetary destruction in the media. They are voluminous. But whether it is the loss of a hundred species to our ecosystem a day or the destruction of old growth forests equal to the area of Pennsylvania each year or even the information that due to pesticides sperm counts of American males today are 50% that of their grandfathers, we seem to respondto these facts with denial, repression or despair rather than conscious action. Although planetary restoration is still possible, no one expects modern science or conventional state religions to turn this situation around. Indeed, many leading edge thinkers are coming to the conclusion that it is only through the formation of an empathic relationship with the Earth that we will survive. This is what eco-psychologists are saying.

72. EcoTalk: Lori Pye, Eco-Psychology, And Eco-Suicide
Each day, Monday through Friday, Betsy Rosenberg and her guests bring you environmental news, views and voices from the frontlines of the sustainability
http://blogsofbainbridge.typepad.com/ecotalkblog/2007/04/lori_pye_ecopsy.html
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73. Resource: Eco-psychology
Study of these cognitive effects of nature, called environmental psychology or ecopsychology, is a rapidly growing field, attempting to salvage the
http://www.nextstep.state.mn.us/res_detail.cfm?id=1329

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