Not exact matches
«This document supports therapists to provide appropriately informed and ethical practice when working with a client who wishes to
explore, experiences
conflict with or is in distress regarding, their sexual orientation or gender
identity.»
This project will
explore how the Commons select committees fulfil their task of holding the government to account, and will do so by utilising the insights of social psychology and group processes in order to understand how MPs manage their party
identities and regulate partisan
conflict in an «all - party» institutional environment.
Working primarily with oil and acrylic painting, Abe's work
explores notions of
identity, place and home and how those notions simultaneously inspire and
conflict.
Her paintings
explore the often
conflicting aspects of her hybrid
identity and the pictorial push - and - pull of Western Modernism.
Each of the three events will
explore dominant themes such as public space, social control, activism,
identity, war in relation to the overall theme of
Conflict.
Deriving its title from Ralph Ellison's novel, Invisible Man
explores the
conflicted question of racial
identity and its theatrical enactment in U.S. history.
The works
explore themes of political and social injustice,
identity, and contemporary
conflicts between man and nature.
Each work, both in it process and as a product, broaches duality in
identity, as Shannon
explores the nuances of psychological
conflict.
Through observing the intertwined
identities, unregulated economies and shared resistance felt across the densely layered archaeological and urban sites of Lebanon, The Drift
explores the politics of
conflict through its material — and immaterial — residue.
Continuously
exploring the «geography of self,» his work combines traditional storylines and postmodern, often parodist, narrative strategies to approach themes such as belonging,
identity politics,
conflict, cultural traditions (be they real, imagined, invented), as well as the push to and resistance against modernization.
National
identity and geographical
conflict are
explored in the work of Amit Goren, Miki Kratsman, Boaz Arad, and Yaron Leshem, each offering a singular perspective on the Israeli political system.