Contributed Chapters

 
 

Gender and Higher Education Series — Breaking Boundaries: Women in Higher Education (1996)

“Women and Disability in Higher Education: A Literature Search”

Personal Construct Psychology: New Ideas (2006)

“A hygienic process? Researcher and participants construing each other’s worlds”

Feeling Queer or Queer Feelings?: Radical Approaches to Counselling Sex, Sexualities and Genders (2007)

“Kinky clients, kinky counselling?” (with Meg-John Barker and Camelia Gupta)

 

Safe, Sane and Consensual: Contemporary Perspectives on Sadomasochism (2007)

“The Power of Play: The Potentials and Pitfalls in Healing Narratives of BDSM” (with Meg-John Barker, and Camelia Gupta)

Understanding Non-Monogamies (2009)

“Disability and Polyamory: Exploring the Edges of Inter-Dependence, Gender and Queer Issues in Non-Monogamous Relationships”

Equality, Participation and Inclusion I: Diverse Perspectives (2010)

“Inclusion in mainstream classrooms: experiences of deaf pupils” (with Joy Jarvis and Indra Sinka)

 

Mindfulness in Sexual and Relationship Therapy (2014)

“The place of mindfulness in a sensorimotor psychotherapy intervention to improve women’s sexual health” (with Sara J.S. Mize)

Madness, Distress and the Politics of Disablement (2015)

“Social models of disability and sexual distress” (with Meg-John Barker)

 

Counselling Ideologies: Queer Challenges to Heteronormativity (2016)

“Queer Family Therapy — A Contradiction in Terms?”

The Wiley Handbook of Sex Therapy (2017)

“Treating Sexual Problems in Transgender Clients” (with Katherine G. Spencer and Walter Bockting)

Genderqueer and Non-Binary Genders: Critical and Applied Approaches in Sexuality, Gender and Identity (2018)

“Psychotherapy” (with Meg-John Barker) and “Future Directions”

 

Quickies: The Handbook of Brief Sex Therapy, 3rd Edition (2018)

“Sex is for Every Body: Trans-Affirming Sex Therapy” (with Kristen Benson)

A Handbook of Visual Methods in Psychology: Using and Interpreting Images in Qualitative Research (2020)

“Travelling along ‘Rivers of Experience’: Personal Construct Psychology and visual metaphors in research.”