Constructivist psychotherapy remains somewhat unfamiliar to many clinicians, despite offering a variety of innovative and practical therapeutic approaches and techniques. In this volume,
constructivist psychology is presented as it relates to everyday practice. The chapters provide many examples of what constructivist psychotherapy looks like in the real world, showing how one
can make the transition from constructivist theory to constructivist practice with ease. Constructivist therapy often gets labeled as too theoretical and jacking in clinical specificity. Yet
here is a volume with chapters that succinctly and understandably explicate basic theoretical concepts and then demonstrate them with vivid case examples taken from applied experience in the
field.