<p>If one chooses to be different it is important to understand how the group to be challenged will accommodate diversity. Many groups defend themselves against the different the new and the perceived negative by collectively rejecting this element through the creation of a scapegoat. To accommodate diversity Arthur Colman explores ways individuals and groups can grow beyond the continual theme of scapegoating.</p><p>Up from Scapegoating is the first book that connects Jungian psychology and its usual focus on the individual and individual development to group theory and group development. Arthur Colman a pioneer in developing group relations theory and practice in the United States takes Jung&#39;s basic beliefs in the collective unconscious individuation and the shadow and shows their relevance to the problems of groups institutions and political systems. His insights and methods are extremely important in a nuclear and environmental age where every individual&#39;s survival is hinged to the happenings or consciousness of a larger group.</p><p>Groups just like individuals become conscious and whole only by exploring their deepest most profound elements-their victims and heroes their scapegoats and messiahs. In Colman&#39;s twenty years as a group and organizational consultant he has been called on to heal many communities. His unique experiences in developing group consciousness integrating scapegoats and seeing various organizations to levels of &quot;individuation&quot; will help us understand the central patterns of behavior in our own group connections.</p><p><strong>Arthur D. Colman M.D.</strong> is a training analyst and faculty member of the C. G. Jung Institute of San Francisco and a clinical professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of California San Francisco. He is also a consultant to groups and organizations in the United States and Europe. Colman was a founding member and former president of the A. K. Rice Institute in Washington D.C. a national organization for the development and practice of group relations theory. He is the co-editor of <em>Group Relations Reader I and II</em> and the coauthor of <em>The Father Pregnancy: The Psychological Experience</em> and <em>Love and Ecstasy</em>. He has also published numerous articles on group theory and organizational consultation.</p>
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