Scottish Institute of Human Relations

The Scottish Institute of Human Relations, SIHR, was an organisation founded in Edinburgh Scotland in 1972 to promote a broader understanding of mental health and training in Talking therapies. Its origins go back to the practice of Dr. W.R.D. Fairbairn, the Scottish psychoanalyst, and the return to Scotland in 1968 of Dr. J. D. Sutherland, one time medical director of the Tavistock Clinic in London.[1] Other founding contributors included T. Drummond Hunter, a senior NHS administrator, the educationalist Alan Harrow, the philanthropist Sheila Oppenheim, the Kirk minister and son-in-law of Lord Reith Murray Leishman, and the psychiatrist, Dr. J. Douglas Haldane.[2][3]

The Institute ran conferences and courses, modelled on the multidisciplinary and psychoanalytic thinking of its sister organisation in London. It was however, entirely independent with the benefit of having connections to government and enterprises in Scotland and its own independent educational and judicial systems. In the 1990s it opened an office in Glasgow to broaden its reach in the country. It ran successfully for 40 years.[4]

Due to insolvency, it was obliged to wind up in 2012 and was finally dissolved in 2014.


References

  1. Harrow, Alan. (2013) 'The Scottish Connection--Suttie-Fairbairn-Sutherland: A quiet Revolution' in Skolnick, Neil, J. and Scharff, David. Eds. Fairbairn, Then and Now. London/New York: Routledge. ISBN 978 113 4897 33 9
  2. The Scotsman Obituary of Murray Leishman http://www.scotsman.com/news/obituaries/appreciation-murray-leishman-kirk-minister-1-3841459. Retrieved 18 November 2016 (subscription needed)
  3. The Herald Scotland, Obituary of Douglas Haldane, http://www.heraldscotland.com/opinion/obituaries/13070469.Douglas_Haldane/ Retrieved 18 November 2016
  4. "Mental Health Strategy for Scotland 2011– 2015" (PDF). The Scottish Institute of Human Relations. 2012. Retrieved 14 November 2016


External Links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.