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Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Innovative Relevance in a Complex World 8th Annual Conference

8th Annual Conference of the Society for Humanistic Psychology
American Psychological Association Division 32
Humanistic (R)evolution

Innovative Relevance in a Complex World
March 26-29, 2015
The Chicago School of Professional Psychology
Chicago, Illinois

Dear Friends and Colleagues:
The Society for Humanistic Psychology will hold its eighth annual conference this March 26-29, 2015 at The Chicago School of Professional Psychology, Chicago, Illinois. The information you need to  register and arrange for lodging can be located at: http://www.societyforhumanisticpsychologyconference.com/
I am writing you to extend a personal invitation for you to attend the conference. Our eighth annual humanistic conference promises to be an enriching and enjoyable experience as well as a rare opportunity to meet and engage with many of the most creative and accomplished humanistic psychologists and therapists of our times and to network with an extensive humanistic community. In order to have strong student representation at the conference we will be offering low rates for students.  

I will look forward to seeing you at the conference.
Cordially, 


David J. Cain, Ph.D., ABPP
Past President and Conference Committee Member
Society for Humanistic Psychology

8th Annual Conference of the Society for Humanistic Psychology
American Psychological Association Division 32
Humanistic (R)evolution 

Innovative Relevance in a Complex World
March 26-29, 2015
The Chicago School of Professional Psychology
Chicago, Illinois

Register Early for Best Rates




 What is a Humanistic (R)evolution?

The humanistic project has historically advocated for the worth, dignity, honor, and humane care of any and every human being, evermore humanizing de-humanizations locally, regionally, nationally and globally. Today’s complexity, though, brings great challenges to how we can care in innovative and relevant ways within a variety of worlds in pain. Innovative care in our complex world requires an extraordinary sensitivity to diverse ways of living that include responding to diverse practices of oppression. Caring well also means taking into account what it means to live in a multi-tasking culture that includes: a technological complexity that outruns our human capacity to process it; an economic interdependency unfairly distributed; ever dwindling natural resources; more and less connection than ever before; dramatic changes in health care delivery; exam-centric educational systems, among other challenges, all of which are situated in a world of dangerous political agendas loudly effecting some and silently effecting all.

What do we, as The Society of Humanistic Psychology, have to offer to this complex, hurting world that is seeking sustainable, innovative and relevant care?

 Is unconditional positive regard relevant anymore in a world which privileges profit at any and all cost?
What does an understanding of existential, ontological givens offer to a neighborhood at war?
 Is indigenous, shamanic wisdom irrelevant to the Affordable Care Act?
What could phenomenology offer to STEM psychology?
Who goes in the empty chair or the hot seat in an age of intense, co-constituted terrorism?
Can the critical theorists and constructivists offer guidance to the hegemony of “core” curricular design in the classroom?
Does positive psychology offer anything to our ecological crisis?

Initiating a Humanistic (R)evolution

It is time for a humanistic (r)evolution which demonstrates through our research, practices of care, consultation, assessment, and advocacy that we can care well for a world teetering on the precipice.

Come join the evolution of our revolution!

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