The Integrative Client-Centered Model (ICCM) is a counseling model for lawyers and other professionals grounded in traditional client-centered models and updated with modern neuroscience and psychology theories. It provides a simple but robust counseling model that can be applied by professionals of any skill level and in cases involving varying levels of difficulty.
The ICCM is based on the works of many thinkers, such as Dan Siegel (IPNB founder), Allan Schore (psychotherapy), Stephen Porges (Polyvagal Theory), John Bowlby, Mary Main, Patricia Crittenden, Jennifer McIntosh, and Marsha Kline Pruett, (attachment), Murray Bowen (Systems Theory), Haim Ginott (parenting), Ed Tronick (child development), Iain McGilchrist (hemisphere theory), Jaak Panksepp (emotion theory), Abraham Maslow (needs), Gabor Mate (attachment, addiction, ADHD), John Kabat-Zinn (mindfulness), Carl Rogers (client-centered theory), Jeffrey Young (Schema Therapy), Bonnie Badenoch (IPNB and psychotherapy), Charles Darwin (evolutionary biology), Bessel van der Kolk (trauma), Jean Decety (empathy), Marsha Linehan (Dialectical Behavioral Therapy), Dan Pink (Motivation), Leonard Riskin, Robert Baruch Bush, Joseph Folfer (mediation), Bill Ury (negotiation), and Bill Eddy (bridging mental health and legal concepts).
Recent Posts
- ICCI Welcomes sister site: Conflict Science Institute
- Attachment evidence and expert testimony are reliable and admissible using the DMM and IASA Family Attachment Court Protocol
- CLE: Attachment and conflict psychology – Bellingham 9/17/18
- Presentation: DMM clinician tools, from a lawyer’s perspective – Florence IT, 6/13/18
- Study: Common brain parasites can change conflict-relevant personality function -Toxoplasma Gondii