Abstract
SYNOPSISThis article dredges up some of my most vivid memories of the early days in humanistic and radical psychology in this country. The 1970s were very exciting for me, and also for the practice of therapy—particularly group therapy—in this country. And the formation of the UK Association of Humanistic Psychology Practitioners (AHPP) was a highly significant move, followed as it was by the founding of the British Association for Counselling (or BAC, as it was then) accreditation scheme, which took over many of the ideas worked out in the AHPP. When the UK Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP) came to be formed, two of the three people who wrote the identity statement for the Humanistic and Integrative Section (as it was then) came from the AHPP.
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