Plenary Presenters
Presenting in Plenary #1 on Friday Morning:

Karl Tomm, MD FRCPC, is a Professor of Psychiatry in the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary. In 1973 he founded the Family Therapy Program which became the Calgary Family Therapy Centre where he continues as the Director. Karl is interested in the application of systems theory, narrative theory, social constructionism, and
bringforthism to therapy. His work has focused on clarifying patterns of interaction in families, the effects of social injustices on relationships, the influence on therapists of the distinctions they draw, and the possible therapeutic effects of the questions asked in the doing of therapy.
Title:
Hopes for a Generative Gathering

Dr. Lorraine M. Wright, C.M., is Professor Emeritus of Nursing, University of Calgary. She is also an international speaker, author/blogger, and consultant in family nursing and family therapy.
Dr. Wright’s most recent books are: Illness Beliefs (3 rd ed) (2021); Nurses and Families: A guide to family assessment and intervention (7th ed) (2019); and Suffering and Spirituality: The Path to Illness Healing (2017). She has developed 4 clinicial practice models: the Trinity Model (advanced
practice) and co-developed the Illness Beliefs Model (advanced practice) and co-developed the Calgary Family Assessment and Intervention Models (generalist practice).
Title:
From Clinical Skills to Softening Suffering : Bringing forth Love

John Burnham is a systemic psychotherapist working in the independent and public sectors of the UK. His practice includes therapy, supervision, training, consultation, and
writing. His main clinical work is with children, young people, and families at Parkview Clinic in Birmingham where he is employed as a Consultant Systemic and Family
Psychotherapist and formerly was Head of the Systemic Training Programme. As well as training in the UK he teaches in a variety of contexts including Scandinavia, Netherlands, Greece, Singapore, USA, and South America. He is sole author of the classic text ‘Family Therapy: First steps towards a systemic approach’ published by Routledge, and editor of the Special Edition of Human Systems known as ‘Voices from the Training Context’. His model ‘Approach, Method and
Technique’ is widely used in a variety of training contexts. His professional passions include ‘thinking theory and talking ordinary’ and ‘turning practice into theory’.
Co-Presenting with Alison Roper-Hall
Title:
Whatever next... Generative developments emerging over time...

Alison Roper- Hall. With a degree in psychology and a masters in neurophysiology, Alison spent nearly ten years in brain research at Cambridge and Oxford Universities before training in clinical psychology.
She anticipated specializing in neuropsychology but instead saw the relevance of systemic thinking from her understanding of neural systems and trained in
systemic psychotherapy. Working in the NHS, based on her home turf of the West Midlands during the 80s, she first pioneered applying systemic ideas in work within older adult services. Later she took on the task of developing psychological services across the lifespan in Primary Care in Birmingham UK. These services were systemic both in their organization and in offering a range of systemic therapies for individuals, couples and families. Alongside her clinical and managerial work, Alison has been a key member of the Birmingham Systemic Training Programme. Since leaving clinical work she has been enjoying neglected areas of her life such as painting, travelling, sewing, and exploring and writing about her family history.
Co-Presenting with John Burnham
Title:
Whatever next... Generative developments emerging over time...
Presenting in Plenary #2 on Friday Afternoon:

Jacqueline Pereira Boscolo is a co-founder of the Centro Milanese di Terapia della Famiglia (CMTF) in Milan, Italy, and the Director of the Family Mediation Section at CMTF, where she provides training to professional counsellors and works in mediation with families. Since the CMTF inception in 1981 lead by Gianfranco Cecchin and Luigi Boscolo, Jacqueline has made significant contributions to the field of family therapy, in particular related to working with families with members suffering from schizophrenia.
Title:
Possibilities Created by Disquiet

Sheila McNamee is Professor Emerita of
Communication at the University of New Hampshire
and co-founder and Vice President of the Taos Institute (taosinstitute.net). Her work is focused on dialogic transformation within a variety of social and institutional contexts including psychotherapy, education, healthcare, organizations, and communities. She is author of several books and articles, including Practicing Therapy as Social Construction (with E. Rasera & P. Martins, Sage Publications, 2022), Design Thinking and Social Construction (with C. Camargo-Borges, BIS, 2022), Research and Social Change: A Relational Constructionist Approach (with D. M. Hosking, Routledge, 2012), Relational Responsibility: Resources for Sustainable Dialogue (with K. Gergen, Sage, 1999), and Education as Social Construction: Contributions to Theory, Research, and Practice, co-edited with T. Dragonas, K. Gergen, E. Tseliou (Taos WorldShare, 2015). Professor McNamee has written extensively about alternative visions of social research.
Co-Presenting with Jack Lannamann
Title:
Dissing Quiet: On the Generativity of Raising (other) Voices

Jack Lannamann is an Emeritus Associate Professor of Communication at the University of
New Hampshire and an Associate of the Taos Institute. From 2005 through 2017 he was a
member of the graduate faculty in the Program in Social Psychology at the University of
Parma, Italy. Professor Lannamann’s work explores the implications of social
constructionist approaches for understanding embodiment and technology. Another
theme in his recent work is the exploration of dialogic coordination in therapeutic settings
and in end-of-life communication patterns. His published work assessing the possibilities
and limitations of social constructionist approaches to the study of human interaction
appear in Theory and Psychology, Human Systems, Family Process, Journal of Family Therapy,
Communication Theory, Communication Monographs, The Journal of Strategic and Systemic
Therapies, and a number of other scholarly journals and books.
Co-Presenting with Sheila McNamee
Title:
Dissing Quiet: On the Generativity of Raising (other) Voices

Laura Fruggeri, Psychologist and Psychotherapist. She completed her training in systemic therapy with Luigi Boscolo and Gianfranco Cecchin with whom she has also collaborated ever since for many years. Former Professor of Psychology of Family Relationship at the University of Parma, she is now Director of the Bologna Centre of Family Therapy. She has been extensively teaching in UK, Europe, North and South America for more than three decades. Presenter at main national and international conferences. She is author of more than a hundred publications in Italian, English, French, Spanish, Danish and German.
Title:
The Generativity Emerging from Therapist's Changing Position and Language
Presenting in Plenary #3 on Saturday Morning:

Lance Taylor, R.Psych. I began my study of Solution Focused Brief Therapy with Steve de Shazer, Insoo
Kim Berg at the Brief Family Therapy Centre in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. These learnings have been
nurtured through 30 years working in Community Mental Health services as a therapist, supervisor,
manager, private practitioner and trainer. In therapeutic conversations with clients and collaboration
with colleagues, I seek to simplify my practice and description of the solution focus. I relish the
resonance with the bringforthist practice framework at the Calgary Family Therapy Centre and enjoy the
fruitful meeting between the solution focus and the IPscope.
Title:
Solution Focused Pathway into Generativity

Cheryl White works at Dulwich Centre as publisher, editor, teacher, training co-ordinator, conference host, and initiator of projects.
Co-Presenting with David Denborough
Title:
Moments of Generative Disquiet from the History of Narrative Therapy

David Denborough works as a community worker, teacher and writer/editor for Dulwich Centre. He is particularly interested in cross-cultural partnerships which limit the chances of psychological colonization and create possibilities for cross-cultural inventions
Co-Presenting with Cheryl White
Title:
Moments of Generative Disquiet from the History of Narrative Therapy

Stephen Madigan MSW, MSc, PhD, is an award-winning narrative therapist, best-selling therapy author, Training Director of the Vancouver School for Narrative Therapy, content manager of VSNT.live, long-time supervisor to Norway’s High Couple Conflict Teams, and wrote the first ever doctoral dissertation on narrative therapy. His therapy work is studied in Graduate University programs across the world through various media forms such as the American Psychological Associations production of a set of six professional learning videos filming his live narrative practice, and the 1st and 2nd Edition of his book Narrative Therapy, published in 2011 & 2019 (3 rd Edition out in 2023). Stephen teaches, trains, consults, and supervises world-wide.
Title:
Letter to the Next Generation of Therapists
Presenting in Plenary #4 on Saturday Afternoon:

Kyriaki Polychroni, MA, CGP, LMFT, is a Psychologist, Systemic Psychotherapist, Faculty and Scientific Advisory Council member at the Athenian Institute of Anthropos (AIA) in Greece - the first center to practice family therapy in Europe. She is Past President of the European Family Therapy Association (EFTA), recognized for her major role in the networking and mutual learning of Family Therapy Trainers in Europe and, in 2016, honored by EFTA for her contribution to the field. Kyriaki is specialized in Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) and is Founder/Coordinator of the EFT Greek Network. Central to Kyriaki’s work is understanding culturally defined patterns of relating echoed in partners’ Inner Voices as a means for facilitating development; and sociocultural change influencing family functioning, particularly as related to the couple relationship and to the woman’s role.
Title:
Here-and-There: Inner and Outer Relational Disquiet

Dan Wulff and Sally St. George. We have enjoyed working at the Calgary Family Therapy Centre and the University of Calgary for
the last 15 years, endeavoring to integrate social work and family therapy and research and
practice. Social constructionism has been our philosophical and theoretical home and has
nurtured our family therapy practice to focus on social justice, envision families within larger
systems, and support research innovations that are less expert-driven and more collaborative
and distributed.
Title:
Families as Nested within Socio-Cultural Discourses and Larger Systems

Dr. Imelda McCarthy (www.imeldamccarthy.com) works as a systemic therapist/supervisor at the Fifth Province Centre in Dublin. She also facilitates a weekly
meditation group and Spiritual Direction under the Fifth Province Sangha. Her work on the Fifth Province has been published and presented internationally in
over 20 countries and has been translated into 8 languages. She is one of the co-founders of the Family Therapy Association of Ireland and the first FT training
programmes in Ireland. She has also been on the editorial boards of Major international systemic therapy journals in Ireland, USA, UK and Australia. She also co-edited two international books with Carmel Flaskas and Jim Sheehan, ‘Hope and Despair in Narrative and Family Therapy’ (2007) and with Gail Simon, Systemic Therapy as Transformative Practice (2017) Imelda retired from 30 years teaching in Social Science at University College Dublin and initiated their first PhD programme in Families and Systemic Therapies.
Title:
At a Crossroads: Some Musings from a Fifth Province
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Charles Waldegrave is Coordinator of the Family Centre Pākehā (European) Section and leader of the
Family Centre Social Policy Research Unit. He co-leads the ‘New Zealand Poverty Measurement Project’ (NZPMP) which has provided the evidence base for social and economic changes in New Zealand including, the anti-child poverty ‘Working for Families’ package and seven of the ten measures in the Child Poverty Reduction Act 2018. He leads the team that sets the Living Wage annually for the country.
He is one of the founders of ‘Just Therapy’, an internationally recognised approach to addressing
cultural, gender and socioeconomic contexts in therapy. He has been a Joint recipient of the
American Family Therapy Academy (AFTA) Award for a Distinguished Contribution to Social Justice
and the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy Special Award for Distinguished
Contributions to Family Therapy. He publishes regularly in all of the above areas.
Co-Presenting with Taimalieutu Kiwi Tamasese
Title:
The World the Families We Serve Live In: Addressing the Socio-Cultural Contexts and Wellbeing

Taimalieutu Kiwi Tamasese is a Samoan family therapist, community worker, and researcher. She is
Coordinator of the Pacific Section at the Family Centre. One of her outstanding research achievements is the development of fa’afaletui methodology, which is a research method that is sensitive and responsive to cultural norms and methodologically rigorous. The work was funded by the Health Research Council and subsequently published as a ‘Qualitative Investigation into Samoan Perspectives on Mental Health and Culturally Appropriate Services’ Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry in 2005, Vol. 39 (4).
She is one of the founders of ‘Just Therapy’, an internationally recognised approach to addressing
cultural, gender, and socioeconomic contexts in therapy. She has been a Joint recipient of the
American Family Therapy Academy (AFTA) Award for a Distinguished Contribution to Social Justice
and the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy Special Award for Distinguished
Contributions to Family Therapy.
Co-Presenting with Charles Waldegrave
Title:
The World the Families We Serve Live In: Addressing the Socio-Cultural Contexts and Wellbeing