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         Ecopsychology:     more books (23)
  1. Ecopsychology of Border Islands of Okinawa: From Isis to Biopolitics, and Beyond by Tatsuhiro Nakajima, 2010-04-28
  2. Ecopsychology by Kevin Snorf, 1999
  3. Deep Ecology: Deep ecology. Anarcho-primitivism, Eco-communalism, Ecopsychology, Environmental psychology, Human ecology,Pathetic fallacy, Sustainable ... of Gaia, Voluntary Human Extinction Movement
  4. Eco-Psychology Reader, EP 101 by Laura Sewall, 2002
  5. ECOPSYCHOLOGY by Theodore, Mary Gomes and Allen Kanner Roszak, 1995
  6. The Web of Life Imperative: Regenerative Ecopsychology Techniques That Help People Think in Balance With Natural Systems by Michael J. Cohen, 1980
  7. Ecopsychology
  8. And So It Began by Jy Chiperzak, 2000-06-05
  9. Forest Lectures on the Highest Yoga by Vladimir Antonov, 2010-02-08

21. Education, Counseling, Wellness & Nature: Books, Courses, Degrees, Grants; Ecops
Education, Counseling, Wellness and Nature Books, Courses, Degrees, Grants, Jobs,ecopsychology Online low cost, distance learning includes prior experience
http://www.ecopsych.com/
Project NatureConnect
Educating, Counseling and Healing With Nature
Applied Ecopsychology in Action
Enter the Site

Overview
A Quick
Shortcut:

Is this
educational
program
for you?
Meet the Challenge for
Sustainability
and Peace
Engage in the gentle art and science of pollution free, nature-connected organic psychology. Learn online through hands-on, environmentally friendly enabling tools, books and wellness activities. Benefit from low-cost, accredited, online, CEU courses, Ph.D., M.S. and B.S. degree programs and scholarships that include your past training and life experiences. Promote peace: help yourself and others remedy the abusive estrangement of our thinking from natural systems within and around us. Master nature-connected learning in: Self-help or Personal Growth. Life or Personal Coaching and Leadership. Teaching, Healing, Mentoring, or Facilitating.

22. Hands-On Ecopsychology Distance Learning Books, Activities, Courses, Degrees And
Interactive, sensory ecopsychology activities in nature restore your 53 naturalsenses wellness, balance and integrity result. APPLIED ecopsychology.
http://www.ecopsych.com/ecopsychologyh/ecopsychologyh.html
Welcome to the www.ecopsych.com homepage introduction to ECOPSYCHOLOGY IN ACTION !
APPLIED
ECOPSYCHOLOGY Walk nature's path to a fulfilling livelihood, self-improvement and responsible relationships.
This site offers hands-on nature/psychology/recovery methods,
books,
courses by email,
internships,
discussion groups,
workshops,
distance learning degree programs,
livelihoods online interactive self-discovery trails Earthday and Millennium activities presented by INSTITUTE OF GLOBAL EDUCATION in association with the United Nations Deptartment of Public Information P ROJECT N ATURE C ONNECT Wellness for person, planet and spirit Select here to enter this site. This site is the home of: The Inner Nature Self-Discovery Trail Explore this website through fun interactive experiences online The N atural S ystems T hinking P rocess Environmentally sound personal growth and social justice APPLIED ECOPSYCHOLOGY IN ACTION Education as if Planet Earth mattered RECONNECTING WITH NATURE: f inding wellness through restoring your bond with the Earth by M.J.Cohen, Ecopress

23. ECOPSYCHOLOGY - THEORY AND PRACTICE
ecopsychology THEORY AND PRACTICE. The Second Esalen Institute InvitationalConference June 26 - July 1, 1994. INTRODUCTION. TEACHING ecopsychology.
http://www.well.com/user/suscon/esalen/ecopsyche.html
ECOPSYCHOLOGY - THEORY AND PRACTICE
The Second Esalen Institute Invitational Conference
June 26 - July 1, 1994
INTRODUCTION
THE CONFERENCE
What is the most effective way to encourage healthy environmental behavior? Is our consumer culture a form of psychopathology? Has the city become the implacable enemy of nature? Can modern industrial societies recapture the ecological insights that lay buried in their indigenous past? What is the role of the churches and of pastoral counseling in the environmental crisis? Can environmental law protect the sacred in nature? What is the best way to introduce ecopsychology into the universities? These are some of the questions that came under discussion at Ecopsychology: Theory and Practice 1994, an invitational conference sponsored by the Ecopsychology Institute and held at Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California from June 26 to July 1, 1994. In the following pages we offer a brief summary of the main issues and insights that emerged at this event, where a group of environmental writers, activists, ministers, therapists, poets, media specialists, scholars and teachers met to explore how our individual and collective psyches interact with what David Abram called the "more-than-human world." This report may be more useful in raising questions rather than providing answers. But that is in the spirit of the gathering. Participants came with a commitment to using the unstructured, leaderless format of the meetings primarily as "invitations to dialogue."

24. Overview Of Ecopsychology
OVERVIEW OF ecopsychology. INTRODUCTION. ecopsychology is developingrapidly as a field of study, and it has no single definition yet.
http://clem.mscd.edu/~davisj/ep/ecopsy.html
OVERVIEW OF ECOPSYCHOLOGY JOHN DAVIS , Ph.D.
Department of Psychology
The Metropolitan State College of Denver This page is part of a site for the Environmental Psychology course I teach. ON THIS PAGE
DEFINITIONS

AN EXTENSION: ECOPSYCHOLOGY AND TRANSPERSONAL PSYCHOLOGY

A DIFFERENT KIND OF DEFINITION

TWO QUOTES
...
RECOMMENDED READING
INTRODUCTION Ecopsychology is developing rapidly as a field of study, and it has no single definition yet. The term is used in different ways by several different practitioners and researchers. My aim here is to summarize what I see as the main themes or contributions of Ecopsychology. By the way, when I say these are insights, I do not mean to imply that they are unique or original to Ecopsychology. Our ancestors who lived close to the Earth as well as indigenous people around the world today have a bead on these understandings. Among the origins of this field are the following:
  • Theodore Roszak was one of the first to develop this term and write about it for a general audience. His books
  • 25. About Environmental Psych And Ecopsychology
    ABOUT ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY AND ecopsychology. JOHN DAVIS, Ph.D.Department of Psychology The Metropolitan State College of Denver.
    http://clem.mscd.edu/~davisj/ep/aboutep.html
    ABOUT ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY AND ECOPSYCHOLOGY JOHN DAVIS , Ph.D.
    Department of Psychology
    The Metropolitan State College of Denver This page is part of a site for the Environmental Psychology course I teach. At this point, from this page, you can reach an outline of areas of interest to environmental psychologists and a brief summary of ecopsychology. More will be coming soon. OUTLINE OF ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY OVERVIEW OF ECOPSYCHOLOGY WHERE TO GO IN THIS SITE Top of Page Environmental Psychology home page Course Syllabus Links to other sites ... MSCD Updated February 17, 1999

    26. Green Psychology/Ecopsychology/Ecological Worldview
    Green Psychology / ecopsychology / Ecological Worldview. EcologicalStudies A Research Bibliography by Ralph Metzner. The Place and
    http://www.rmetzner-greenearth.org/eco.html
    Green Psychology / Ecopsychology / Ecological Worldview Ecological Studies: A Research Bibliography
    by Ralph Metzner The Place and the Story: Bioregionalism and Ecopsychology
    excerpted from forthcoming book, Green Psychology
    Article by Ralph Metzner Selected Ecological and Environmental Organizations Northern California River Watch
    A Local Sonoma County Group Return to Home Page Green Earth Foundation
    P.O. Box 327, El Verano, Ca 95433

    27. Ecopsychology On-Line Archives
    for. ecopsychology OnLine. The ecopsychology On-Line web site has informationon the journal, archives, and links to other resources on the subject.
    http://www.cs.cmu.edu/People/spok/serials/ecopsych.html
    presents
    SERIAL ARCHIVE LISTINGS
    for
    Ecopsychology On-Line
    Ecopsychology On-Line was a journal of "the emerging synthesis of ecology and psychology" edited by Theodore Roszak and published by the Ecopsychology Institute at California State University, Hayward.
    Publication History
    The journal began publication in 1996, and ceased publication with issue 6, in 1998.
    Persistent Archives of Complete Issues
    • The Ecopsychology On-Line web site has what appears to be the complete set of articles from all six issues.
    Official Site
    The Ecopsychology On-Line web site has information on the journal, archives, and links to other resources on the subject. This is a record of a major serial archive. This page is maintained for the On-Line Books Page . (See our criteria for listing serial archives .) This page has no affiliation with the serial or its publisher.

    28. Ecopsychology By Theodore Roszak
    ecopsychology. Restoring the Earth, Healing the Mind. by Theodore Roszak,Mary E. Gomes, and Allen D. Kanner (editors). Praise for ecopsychology.
    http://www.ecobooks.com/ecopsych.htm
    What's New Catalog Order About Us
    Ecopsychology
    Restoring the Earth, Healing the Mind
    by Theodore Roszak, Mary E. Gomes, and Allen D. Kanner (editors)
    338 pages, paperback, Sierra Club, 1995, out-of-print The essays in Ecopsychology address the connections between the human mind and the natural world.
    Praise for Ecopsychology
    "Ecopsychology provides a powerful new dimension to the environmental movement, suggesting that by living in greater harmony with the natural world we shall not only help to save our planet from ultimate destruction but shall also improve our mental health and be happier and more fulfilled human beings." Jane Goodall "It is a remarkable fact that, despite its significance for human welfare, the relation of the mind to the natural world has been largely ignored by science. The contributors to this volume scout the unmapped territory far ahead; I hope that many others will soon follow." Edward O. Wilson "A glad welcome to this affirmation by a group of psychologists that the self does not stop at the skin nor even with the circle of human relationships but is interwoven with the lives of trees and animals and soil; that caring for the deepest needs of persons and caring for our threatened planet are not in conflict." Mary Catherine Bateson
    Quotes from Ecopsychology
    "The scale on which both environmentalism and therapy are pursued diverges radically from political business as usual. Neither ecological nor psychotherapeutic problems can be fully solved, if at all, within the boundaries defended by the nation- state, the free-trade zone, the military alliance, or the multinational corporation The one transcends even the largest of these awkwardly improvised human structures; the other eludes their insensitive grasp. Perhaps this is in itself an ecological fact of the highest importance. We are living in a time when both the Earth and the human species seem to be crying out for a radical readjustment in the scale of our political thought."

    29. Center For Psychology & Social Change | The Ecopsychology Institute | Entrance
    The ecopsychology Institute The driving premise of the ecopsychology Institute isthat the Earth is a unified, related community of beings in a living universe
    http://www.centerchange.org/eco/

    30. John E Mack Institute
    Loving Nature ecopsychology workshop announced for March in Concord MA and CambridgeMA Click here to download your printable flier with complete information
    http://www.centerchange.org/center/center_news.asp?id=202

    31. Naropa University -Online MA In Transpersonal Psychology Ecopsychology Concentra
    ecopsychology integrates psychology and ecology in the study of humannature relationships. Thankyou for your interest in ecopsychology programs at Naropa.
    http://www.naropa.edu/eponline/
    Search Engine best viewed
    with Internet Explorer or
    Dear Colleagues and Prospective Students: Thank you for your interest in Ecopsychology programs at Naropa. Naropa University is now offering a new low residency, online Master’s Degree Concentration in Ecopsychology that will begin in the summer of 2004. This degree will be an Ecopsychology Concentration within the existing online Master’s in Transpersonal Psychology. This program and Naropa University are fully accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. We welcome your interest. A central feature of this program is its use of the Internet for distance learning. We are especially excited about the possibilities of combining Naropa’s whole-person and contemplative educational approach with the benefits of online education. During the program, students are required to come to Naropa’s Boulder campus for a one-week period each summer and a three- day period each winter. All other coursework may be done at a distance using the Internet. The MATP-EP program begins with the summer one-week residential intensive in Boulder, with a second residential intensive at the beginning of the second year. There are also two three-day winter intensives in Boulder in the ecopsychology concentration. Students usually take two courses a semester, including summers, and complete the program in two years through a combination of required courses and electives. In addition to required courses, students may draw from a broad selection of online courses or self-design coursework through independent study. Check Naropa’s website for current course offerings.

    32. Center For Ecopsychology
    Greetings. Thank you for your past interest in ecopsychology programs,courses and degrees at Naropa University. Enclosed you will
    http://www.naropa.edu/ecopsychology/
    Search Engine best viewed
    with Internet Explorer or
    Greetings. Thank you for your past interest in ecopsychology programs, courses and degrees at Naropa University. Enclosed you will find information about several educational opportunities in ecopsychology at Naropa University in 2004, including the recently approved low resisdency Master's Degree Concentration in Ecopsychology If I can answer any questions or be of help in any other way, please call 614-921-1997 or email me at jedscottswift@earthlink.net MARCH 25-28, 2004
    Ecopsychology For Educators Training

    Faculty: Dominie Cappadonna and Jed Swift
    JUNE 14-19, 2004
    WAKING UP TOGETHER ECOPSYCHOLOGY TRAINING
    Faculty: TBA DECEMBER 3-5, 2004
    Jed Swift and Dominie Cappadonna Click here to find out more..
    Naropa University is now offering a new low residency, online Master's Degree concentration in Ecopsychology that will begin in the summer of 2004. This degree will be an ecopsychology concentration within the existing online Master's in Transpersonal Psychology. Click here to find out more..

    33. Ecopsychology
    ecopsychology F. Kenneth Freedman. Introduction. I’ma prime candidate forwilderness therapy. It is in this context that I came to ecopsychology.
    http://www.alaska.net/~fken/Ecopsych.htm

    34. The Lodge
    Horizontal RuleImage. ecopsychology. What Is ecopsychology? To quoteClaudia Robinson, ecopsychology is an emerging, multidisciplinary
    http://www.nierica.com/LodgeTOC.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) Relative Links
    Shamanism
    Indigenous People Wilderness Work
    Ecopsychology
    ... Compadres
    Shamanism Links The Deoxyribonucleic Hyperdimension Shamanism pages The Lycaeum World's Largest Online Entheogenic Library and Community
    Indigenous Peoples The Native American Rights Fund's Priorities Legal Review
    1506 Broadway, Boulder, CO. 80302
    Newsletter of a nonprofit organization specializing in the protection ofIndian rights. The Native American Rights Fund's Priorities are:
  • Preservation of tribal existence;
  • Protection of tribal natural resources;
  • Promotion of human rights;
  • Accountability of governments to Native Americans; and
  • 35. Talking Leaves: Spring 2003
    The ecopsychology Connection with Permaculture. By Myra McKenney withthanks to Louise Buck and Elan Shapiro. What Is ecopsychology?
    http://www.talkingleaves.org/s03ecopsychology.htm
    The Ecopsychology Connection with Permaculture
    By Myra McKenney
    with thanks to Louise Buck and Elan Shapiro I n an age of overwhelming mistrust, insecurity, and inequality, humans are anxiously striving for a new way to live. People in industrialized countries have created a culture of fearful, ungrounded, disconnected, isolated human beings. Many individuals see these problems and desire a revolutionary social change in our "civilized" lifestyles. People from all realms of life are beginning to create ways to integrate a more relational and holistic worldview into their current lifestyles. Some people are learning how to change their lives by re-creating how they perceive the world and learning to practice sustainability in their everyday activities. In this article I will discuss why there is so much discontent in the US, relate it to my experience of living in an intentional community in the summer of 2002, and explore the links between the human psyche and the Earth psyche in the emerging field of ecopsychology and in the practices of permaculture. Together, these practices offer one approach to helping create a socially and ecologically sustainable culture and world.
    Our Culture
    W hat do humans need? "Air, food, drink, shelter, warmth, clothing, affection, company, stimulating work, freedom from stress, health" (Bell, 37). I would add that humans also need feelings of connectedness, ways of expressing their unique creativity, and a sense of meaningful participation and contribution to something larger than themselves. Do people living and struggling in our current capitalistic society and consumerist culture have all of these basic human needs met? I think there are many people who are deprived of one thing or another. While I was living in the intentional community, Lost Valley Educational Center in Dexter, OR, and enrolled in a Naka-Ima (personal growth) workshop, a dear person shared this quote to help me trust in myself that one's environment truly is key to their well-being.

    36. Talking Leaves, Summer 2002: Ecopsychology, Self And Place
    Summer 2002. Volume 12, Number 2 ecopsychology, Self and Place. Subscribe For a samplecopy of the Summer 2002 issue, ecopsychology, Self and Place, send $6 to
    http://www.talkingleaves.org/summer02.htm
    Summer 2002
    Volume 12, Number 2
    Ecopsychology, Self and Place
    CONTENTS
    • "Alert: High Water Everywhere, Financial Buoys Needed"
    • Submissions/Upcoming Themes
    • Talking Back
    • "Notes from the Editor"
    • "Bearing Witness" by Sharon Blick
    • Our Coming Home by David Weiss
    • Tree Hugger by Jan Koenen
    • "A Mad Spiritual Geography: A Psychospiritual Journey Into the Land" by Karen M. Lane
    • daffodils, faded fires, madrona by Devon Bonady
    • sara by Chris Roth
    • remembering the Hopi Center for Human Services by Chris Roth
    • Amboy Crater by Tanja North
    • Words End, OOOHHH, Only in Infinite Moments by Greg Michael
    • Air of Humility Genome by Paul Campbell
    • Soul of My Soul by Wanda Waterman St. Louis
    • Mango Alive!: Self and SeedOr Why All Gardeners Are Cracked" by Chris Roth
    • "The Ecopsychology of Place" by Jesse Wolf Hardin
    • Partial Eclipse by Amy Trussell
    • Speak Up, You Know I Can't Hear You When the Industrial Machine Is On by dianne tweten
    • "Carrie's Journey: Becoming the Goddess" by Dianne Brause
    • "What's New at Lost Valley" by Dianne Brause and Duffy
    • The Sliding Fingers of Rain by Aryeh Shell
    • "Such Things Happen" by Russ Reina
    • Lost Valley Upcoming Programs and Events
    • Please Subscribe!

    37. Schumacher College - Ecopsychology
    SCHUMACHER COLLEGE An International Centre for Ecological Studies. ecopsychology.by John Seed. I take ecopsychology to mean psychology in service to the Earth.
    http://www.schumachercollege.org.uk/articles/teachers-articles/ecopsychology.htm
    SCHUMACHER COLLEGE
    An International Centre for Ecological Studies Ecopsychology by John Seed In spite of the modern delusion of alienation, of separation from the living Earth, we humans are not aliens, we belong here. The human psyche too is Earth-born, the result of 4000 million years of continuous evolution. The complex, dynamic biology from which psyche emerged necessarily remains the matrix, the grounding of any sane psychology. I take "ecopsychology" to mean psychology in service to the Earth. We have all heard about the massive assault on our life-support systems. Yet it has not changed our behaviour except in rather trivial ways. How will we change our thinking and our behaviour to bring our technologies and lifestyles into harmony with the biological constraints of Earthly existence? What is needed? Not more horrifying statistics surely. Everybody already knows. We feel helpless and disempowered as the technologic juggernaut rolls along. Scientists warn that we may be the last generation of humanity to have the chance to avert biological collapse and irreparable damage to the systems that support complex life on Earth. Paul Ehrlich thinks that we are sawing off the branch that we're sitting on. James Lovelock said it's as if the brain were to decide that it is the most important organ in the body and started mining the liver. Sounds to me like some kind of psychological problem.

    38. Scott Taylor's Research In Ecopsychology
    Scott Taylor s Research in ecopsychology. An Exploration of Wilderness EffectsA Phenomenological Inquiry. Chapter One ecopsychology and Nature Reconnection.
    http://www.c-zone.net/taylors/
    Scott Taylor's Research in Ecopsychology An Exploration of Wilderness Effects: A Phenomenological Inquiry By Scott Taylor taylors@c-zone.net Abstract: Introduction Chapter One Chapter Two Chapter Three ... Appendices A, B, C and Bibliography Further Writings in Humanistic and Ecopsychology A Brief History of the Perennial Question: Western Views on the Natural World Sedge Grass: The Roots of Pomoan Identity About the Author (Scott Taylor) Related Links Link to Eagle Mountain Institute Web Site Link to International Community for Ecopsychology http://www.askalana.com/ I ntroduction T of a world. There seems to me to be a dearth of qualitative, phenomenologically based studies in this area, which would attempt to reveal, in a non-biased way, without possible results skewing hypotheses, the significance of the type of psychological and possible spiritual processes and changes that have been reported and can take place during extended wilderness stays. I believe the relative absence of presuppositions involving hypotheses will enable themes to emerge from the twelve interviews I have conducted as part of this study. These themes then will have come more or less directly from my co-researcher’s (interviewee's) experiences of wilderness. Staying true to the spirit of phenomenological inquiry and watching themes emerge organically, so to speak, is both inspiring and encouraging. What this and other similar studies have found could open the doors for further research in this area. One point of this study is just that; to further open, for heuristic purposes, phenomenological inquiry and qualitative research in this area by helping to formulate more ideas and questions regarding the nature of wilderness experience and its implications. It is my hope that this will facilitate the honoring, on a wider scale, of these processes and experiences and take a step toward a deeper understanding of interrelationship and the profoundly symbiotic nature of our existence with our beloved and endangered earth.

    39. Theodore Roszak - Awakening The Ecological Unconscious
    ecopsychology healing our alienation from the rest of Creation. There are a numberof fascinating issues ecopsychology has brought into strong, personal focus
    http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC34/Roszak.htm
    Awakening The Ecological Unconscious
    Ecopsychology: healing our alienation from the rest of Creation
    by Theodore Roszak
    One of the articles in Exploring Our Interconnectedness (IC#34)
    Winter 1993, Page 48
    To order this issue ...

    Vice President Al Gore, in his book, Earth in the Balance, is among those who compare our culture's inability to effectively grapple with our ecological crisis to a dysfunctional family. In both cases one finds symptoms of denial, failure to take responsibility for damage caused, and a sense of inertia that interferes with meaningful change. But where can a dysfunctional culture go for a cure?
    Theodore Roszak's call for a new synthesis of psychology, cosmology, and ecology may be part of the answer. "We need a new discipline that sees the needs of the planet and the person as a continuum and that can help us reconnect with the truth that lies in our communion with the rest of creation," he writes in
    The Voice of the Earth (Simon and Schuster, soon to be released as a Touchstone paperback).
    Theodore Roszak's book has sparked an interest among many in related fields in the potential for a new discipline based on these principles. He has dubbed this discipline "ecopsychology," and he is asking those interested in integrating the expertise of the environmentalist with the sensibility of the therapist to write to him at the History Department, California State University, Hayward CA 94542.

    40. Shamanism & Ecopsychology
    psychology. Her current project is a section in an upcoming book on thesubject of ecopsychology. AS What exactly is ecopsychology? Gray
    http://www.woodfish.org/ecopsych.html
    In preparing this edition of American Spirit, the topic of Shamanism came to mind. I located phone numbers for a few of the practicing Shamans in the local area. This is how I got in touch with Leslie. After talking to her for a few minutes and arranging a time for an interview, it occurred to me that I had participated in a drum journey with her almost ten years ago in a home in the Berkeley Hills. This was in the beginning of my "search for truth." Wow! So much had happened since then! I remember the journey being a very profound experience, so this made the interview even more meaningful for me. That's one of the great things about working on this paper. I've gotten to meet many people, teachers, authors, etc., that have touched my life in some way and discussing their own lives and realizations with them has been quite a joy. We did the interview in her San Francisco home on a Sunday morning. Leslie, a Native American Shaman, also holds a Ph.D. in psychology. Her current project is a section in an upcoming book on the subject of ecopsychology. Needless to say, there were many topics explored and we've done our best to give a summary of all the things we discussed. AS: What exactly is Ecopsychology?

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