ABA 2018
Environment & Sustainability
New Partners for Smart Growth
New Partners for Smart Growth, 2015
New Partners for Smart Growth, 2014
New Partners for Smart Growth, 2013
New Partners for Smart Growth, 2012
LGC - CA Adaptation Forum 2014
Society for Conservation Biology, 2012
Behavior, Energy & Climate Change, 2010
TIDES
Building Opportunities Conference, Los Angeles, 2011
Building Opportunites Conference: TIDES, DC '09
Buillding for Sustainable Communities Conference: TIDES, Berkeley '09
Collaborating for Success, 2007
Social Justice
American Bar Association
American Bar Association 2017
American Bar Association 2015
American Bar Association 2014
American Bar Association 2013
American Bar Association 2012
A Just Bay Area, Oakland 2013
Out & Equal 2011
Take Back America, 08
Take Back America, 07
Engaging The Other, 08
SE Alliance
Social Enterprise Summit, 11
Social Enterprise Summit, 2010
Social Enterprise Summit 08
Social Enterprise Summit, 09
Social Enterprise Summit 07
OLOC 2014
CELA 2017
CELA 2018
CELA 2019
Rabbis for Human Rights, 08
Education
Gender Spectrum 2017
Gender Spectrum 2016
Gender Spectrum 2015
Gender Spectrum 2014
Gender Spectrum 2013
Gender Spectrum 2012
Gender Spectrum 2011
CACTI, April 2012
WRCBAA - Black American Affairs
Universal Learning Conference
C.G. Jung Institute of SF
Health & Wellness
American Group Psychotherapy Association
AGPA 2019
AGPA 2018
AGPA 2017
AGPA 2016
AGPA 2015
AGPA 2014
AGPA 2013
AGPA 2012
AGPA 2011
AGPA 2010
AGPA 2020
American Psychoanalytic Association
APSA 2019
APSA 2025
APSA February 2018
APSA January 2017
APSA January 2016
APSA January 2015
APSA January 2014
APSA January 2013
APSA January 2012
APSA June 2012
APSA June 2011
APSA 2020
Nat'l Hemophilia Foundation
NHF Conference, 2015
NHF Conference, 2014
NHF Conference, 2013
NHF Conference, 2012
NHF Conference, 2011
NHF Conference, 2010
NHF Conference, 2009
Nevada State Conference on Problem Gambling, 2010
Drug Policy Alliance
Nevada State Conference on Problem Gambling, 2009
EMDR 3rd Annual Parnell Institute
Int'l Conference on Gambling
Transgender Health 2013
Create Your Future 2014
Globe Sound Healing Conference
Parnell Institute: EMDR
Sustainable Business
Social Venture Network, 2010
BALLE, Bellingham 2011
BALLE, South Carolina 2010
Progressive Opportunities Conference, 2012
Women Take On The World
Montclair Women's Club Video Documentary
Professional BusinessWomen's Conf. of CA
PBWC, May 2011
PBWC, May 2010
Invent Your Future, for Women
Invent Your Future, 2012
Invent Your Future, 2011
Invent Your Future, 2010
Invent Your Future, '09
Oakland Women's Summit, '09
Gems from the Archive
Active Resistance
Breast Cancer & The Environment
Feminist Icons
Entrepreneurial Success
Marilyn King's Olympian Thinking
Dale Marie Golden
Elinor Stutz
Audio Books
Trade Up!
Dr. Lakita Long
I Open My Heart
Life Moxie!
Qty
#
Title
Format
Price
Subtotal
NPSG12-104
Overcoming Barriers to Sustainably Redevelop Historic Communities: Focus on Main Street
Speakers: Nora Johnson, Policy Fellow, Office of Sustainable Communities, U.S. EPA; Yolanda Bouchee, Green Historic Preservation Specialist, U.S. EPA, Region 5; Joi Ross, Owner/CEO, APEX Direct, Inc.; Matthew Walsh. Assistant for Special Projects, City of Concord, NH
Green building practices do not need to be limited to new construction: historic properties can be an important way to incorporate green building into existing building stock and play an important role in downtown revitalization. This panel describes US EPA's efforts to assist in green historic preservation nationwide, focusing on EPA's recent Concord, NH, technical assistance project to help Concord identify tools to sustainably redevelop the upper stories of their historic properties downtown. The panel discusses lessons learned and provide tools for both developers and communities. In addition, the assessment tool resulting from the project is presented, designed to help determine how successful a community has been in marrying green building practices, historic preservation, and smart growth principles.
MP3
$10.00
NPSG12-225
Land Use in a Building Code??? Meet the International Green Construction Code
AGPA18-211
Navigating the Risky Business of Assessing Suicide in Therapy Groups
Speakers: Joeleen Cooper-Bhatia, Erica Smith
$15.00
NPSG12-145
Next Generation of Smart Growth: Lessons from Austin, Texas, and Dublin, Ohio
Speakers: David Dixon FAIA, Principal in charge of Planning and Urban Design, Goody, Clancy & Associates; Kevin Ratner, President, Forest City Residential West; Heather K. Way, Director, Community Development Clinic, University of Texas School of Law; Jana McCann, AIA, CEO, McCann Adams Studio; Kaid Benfield, Director, Sustainable Communities, Natural Resources Defense Council
The speakers explore how urban and suburban communities are overcoming political, market, and regulatory challenges to create a new paradigm in these cities for sustainable, vibrant, and inclusive development. Learn about the community processes, implementation strategies, and public-private partnerships being utilized to advance a wide range of targeted smart housing goals, including affordable housing, green infrastructure, and pedestrian-friendly design.
OAE11-106
Harnessing Social Media for ERG Outreach & Engagement 2.0
NPSG15-300
Morning Plenary — Open Data + Civic Hackers= New Technology for Age-Old Problems
90-minute session
$12.00
APSA14-201
Oral History Workshop #76: The Life and Work of Karl Abraham, 1877-1925
Speakers: Anna Bentinck, PhD/NellieThompson, PhD
$20.00
ConBio12-307
SYM 38 Part I: Geospatial Approaches to Support Pelagic Conservation Planning & Adaptive Management
GenSpec17-218
Your New Normal
Speakers: Lisa Kenney
AGPA18-214-5
Don't Miss the Moment: Putting Process into the Manualized Treatments of CBT, DBT and ACT with Eating Disorders
Speakers: Susan Mengden, DeLinda Spain
OAE11-305
Outing Allies Spotting, Engaging, Linking and Leveraging
APSA_NY13-401
Helping Youth in Violent Communities to Help Themselves: Psychoanalysts at Work in Jamaica & Uganda
Speakers: Marie Rudden, Stuart Twemlow, Martha S. Bragin
The presenters will describe two different interventions, based on applied psychoanalytic principles that helped adolescents in violent communities. Stuart Twemlow describes a school project that radically changed a community and government, using low cost culturally attuned interventions. Martha Bragin discusses the Uganda Ministry of Education and Sports’ initiative to use traditional community strengths in supporting war-affected teachers and students.
OAE11-223
The Four Pillars of Comprehensive LGBT/Workplace Support in the Fight against HIV/AIDS
EMDR17-300
Plenary: Tapping Around the World: Utilizing Resource Tapping As a Standalone Therapy for Activating Healing Resources Through Bilateral Stimulation
Speakers: Julie Probus-Shcad, LCSW
Julie shares experiences of working with youth traumatized by the Ebola outbreak in Liberia, youth affected by the riots in Ferguson, Missouri and more. She outlines ways to incorporate Resource Tapping with marginalized groups.
$18.00
NPSG15-101
Fast and Cheap: Implementing Change from the Grassroots
NPSG12-106
People, Place & Planning: Engaging Residents & Using Data in Revitalization and Evaluation
Speakers: Crystal Dundas, Vice President, Communications and Program Officer; Wells Fargo Regional Foundation; Lois Greco, Senior Vice President, Evaluations; Wells Fargo Regional Foundation; Patrick Morrissy, Executive Director, Housing and Neighborhood Development Services; Eileen Flanagan, Chief Innovator, Community Development Consulting
How can you create and sustain long-term neighborhood change that engages and energizes current residents, leverages the assets and market momentum of a place, and assesses if you've accomplished what you've set out to do? Experience a participatory neighborhood planning process through the eyes of a stakeholder; hear first-hand how one New Jersey community is revitalizing based upon its superb transit access, location, artistic residents and industrial heritage; and learn about tools like Success Measures and PolicyMap that are available to support and assess the impact of these smart-growth activities. The session focuses on a participatory framework towards neighborhood revitalization developed and refined by the Wells Fargo Regional Foundation, and currently subscribed to in more than 40 neighborhoods in eastern Pennsylvania, Delaware and New Jersey.
NPSG12-161
Not Your Father's DOT: Progressive Trends in State Transportation Policy
Speakers: Roger Millar, PE, AICP, Director, Smart Growth America's Leadership Institute; Mary Taylor Raulerson, Principal Planner, Kittelson & Associates; Allen Biehler, PE, Allen Biehler Consulting LLC; Lynn Peterson, Sustainable Communities and Transportation Policy Advisor Governor's Office; Paul F. Morris, FASLA, Deputy Secretary for Transit, North Carolina Department of Transportation
State transportation agencies spend billions of dollars every year on transportation infrastructure. How can we make sure that this spending is focused on supporting and enhancing livable communities? Pennsylvania, Oregon, North Carolina and others have been working towards transportation reforms to create and support livable communities. Learn about their good work and efforts to leverage these successes nationwide.
OAE11-229
Coaching: What It Is; What It Isn’t - Why Every LGBTQA Leader Should Have A Coach!
APSA_NY13-304
Psychoanalysis & Health Care Reform: Impact of the Presidential & Congressional Elections on Psychiatry & Psychoanalysis
Speakers: James C. Pyles
This session is for all members of APsaA and outlines the effect the November 2012 elections will have on health reform and the practice of psychiatry and psychoanalysis. The Affordable Care Act was signed into law in March 2011 and was held constitutional by the Supreme Court on June 28, 2012. Republican members of the House and the Republican candidate for president have pledged to repeal it. APsaA counsel, Jim Pyles has been closely involved in the health reform debate and provides analysis and insight into what the elections mean for health reform.
GenSpec17-102
Gender Inclusive Health and Sexuality Education: Strategies for Advocacy and Implementation
Speakers: Kim Westheimer
NHF12-103
Global Blood Safety, Optimizing Treatment and the Affordability of Care
Speakers: Brian O’Mahony, Mark W. Skinner
Over the next few years, we will see a revolution in treatment not seen since the 1960s. Treatment products will advance on all fronts, from viral-inactivated (solvent detergent) cryoprecipitate, biosimilars of current therapies and treatment products with substantially enhanced efficacy to the increasing likelihood that through gene transfer a “cure” may become a reality. The blood safety concerns of the past have been replaced by current concerns about maintaining vigilance against such blood-borne agents as viruses and prions. Equally important are the challenges of adequate factor supply and access to products around the world. This session describes how patients have started to join forces to bring all key stakeholders together to ensure that the views of product users are considered when it comes to access to these vital therapies. During this session we also address the challenges of answering US government and payer demands for evidence-based medicine, and cost justification for the introduction of new therapies and enhancement of current treatments.
NPSG12-301
Climate and Energy Planning: Community Partnerships that Work
ConBio12-105
Conservation Planning & Climate Change Adaption
APSA_NY13-300
Plenary Address: Second Century for Psychoanalysis and for APsaA — Their Fates May Differ
Speakers: Warren Procci
Psychoanalysis has entered its second century. The current state of the field is mixed, and somewhat bifurcated. Psychoanalysis as a discipline, as a theoretical corpus, and as an area for academic inquiry is holding its own if not necessarily thriving. Contrarily, psychoanalysis as represented in its institutes, societies, centers, and especially within APsaA, our major professional organization, is in a serious decline. The complex reasons for these quite different situations are examined. An inability of the major competing components of our organization to work towards meaningful compromise is, in the speaker’s view, a major factor. Some thoughts concerning what must be done, and quickly, are offered.
NPSG12-162
Essential Components of the 21st Century Community: Housing for the "Missing Middle"
Speakers: Lina Velasco, Senior Planner, City of Richmond, CA; Lisa Wise, Principal, Lisa Wise Consulting, Inc. Moderator: Stefan Pellegrini, Principal, Opticos Design, Inc.
This session examines and debates the potential for medium-density housing as an essential future component of our livable communities. Several indicators have increased recent interest in higher-density housing, including changing demographics, decreasing housing affordability, and increasing efforts to conserve energy through more compact development patterns. At the same time, higher-density housing has been challenged by high development and entitlement costs, limited market share, and incessant NIMBYism. Well-designed, medium-density housing, however, suggests that there is a high potential for cost effective, appropriately-scaled development patterns that will allow today's low density communities to evolve and transition in response to future challenges.
APSA_NY12-300
Plenary Address: Core Issues in the Treatment of Personality Disordered Patients
Speakers: George G. Fishman, MD (Chestnut Hill, MA); Dan H. Buie, MD (Wellesley Hills, MA); Robert Lindsay Pyles, MD, President-Elect (Wellesley Hills, MA)
Neurotic patients possess the capacities required for maintaining their basic self-stability. Personality disordered patients do not. They continuously need to depend on others to provide them with the capacities they need in order to maintain basic self-stability. Clinical experience and relevant literature indicate that these capacities are five in number. They concern self-realness, self-holding so as not to experience aloneness, self-worth, self-love, and identity. This presentation focuses on understanding the consequences of deficits of these capacities along with treatments that can enable patients to develop these capacities for themselves.
NPSG12-146
Infill Development Strategies for Small Cities — Lessons from Billings, MT
Speakers: Roger Millar, PE, AICP, Director, Smart Growth America's Leadership Institute; Tom Hanel, Mayor, City of Billings, MT; Dena Belzer, President, Strategic Economics; Elaine Clegg, Councilmember, City of Boise, ID; Special Projects Manager, Idaho Smart Growth
In April 2011, Smart Growth America partnered with the City of Billings, Montana on a two-day workshop to talk about ways that this relatively small (but regionally significant and growing) city could pursue strategies to foster more and better infill development and curb sprawl. Based on their experience leading this workshop, our panelists will provide an overview of some of the challenges smaller, growing Western cities like Billings face in adopting good infill strategies.
TIDESBERK09-6
Getting to Full Occupancy: Tenant Recruitment, Leasing and Retention
Tenant recruitment and leasing issues are paramount to the long-term success of a shared nonprofit facility. This presentation will provide an interactive environment for questions and peer advice on leasing space in the current market.
NPSG12-170
Plenary: Smart Growth for Economic Recovery
Speakers: Jared Blumenfeld, Regional Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 9; Mary D. Nichols, Chairperson, California Air Resources Board; Mick Cornett, Mayor, City of Oklahoma City, OK
This plenary articulates the important role that the federal government is playing to support sustainable communities across the country — communities that will become more economically resilient in the future. It will also feature how leaders at the state and local levels have implemented smart growth approaches as part of a solution to recover from the economic crisis, move towards fiscal health, and become more economically resilient and vibrant along the way.
APSA20-409
100 Years After “Beyond the Pleasure Principle” – Our Contemporary Traumatizing Surround: Racism, Climate Change & Migration: An Intergenerational Discussion
Speakers: Moderators: Donald B. Moss, M.D., Lynne Zeavin, Psy.D. , Presenters: Lindsay L. Clarkson, M.D., Carol Gilligan, Ph.D., Francisco Gonzalez, M.D. , Dorothy E. Holmes, Ph.D., ABPP , Robert Jay Lifton, M.D. Ann Pellegrini, Ph.D., Irma Brenman Pick, Luis H. Ripoll, M.D.
In a round-table discussion, eight participants addressed issues pertaining to the traumatizing surround common to them and to the audience— with a focus on climate change, racism, and migration. This discussion highlighted new ways of thinking about how to interpret the effects of that surround on ourselves and our patients. Dr. Robert Jay Lifton, perhaps the world’s foremost authority on these issues, was joined by a wide range of psychoanalytic thinkers—each of whom has thought deeply about the place of trauma inside and outside the consulting room.
$25.00
TradeUp-002
Chapter Two: From Bug Soup to Butterfly
$5.00
$382.00
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