<p><em>Psychodynamic Perspectives on Asylum Seekers and the Asylum-Seeking Process</em> looks at the psychosocial assessment of asylum seekers from three perspectives: forensic psychodynamic and political and then attempts to better understand from a psychodynamic perspective differences in the historical/motivational routes of asylum seekers themselves. </p><p>Barbara Eisold begins in Chapter One by exploring the unique evaluation relationship of psychosocial assessment and the striking will to survive of the asylum seekers that it puts into focus using a psychodynamic lens. The forensic value of psychosocial assessment and its potential as both a political and a therapeutic tool are then described. Chapter Two describes individuals who by background and personal characteristics shared a profound desire to protest gravely compromising their survival at home and forcing them to seek asylum elsewhere. Chapter Three discusses women who have suffered female genital mutilation and includes a discussion of the development of strong personal agency in one case. Chapter Four describes abused women from Central America forced to flee from femicide. The evolution of femicide is explored including the development of honor-bound machismo and the wide-spread disregard of law. The hold men have on women is then examined from a psychodynamic perspective.</p><p>Psychodynamic Perspectives on Asylum Seekers and the Asylum-Seeking Process will be of great interest to psychoanalysts psychoanalytic psychotherapists and all mental health professionals working with asylum seekers.</p>
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