Counselling and Psychotherapy Research (CPR)
Journal Descriptions
Counselling and Psychotherapy Research is dedicated to linking research with practice. Pluralist in orientation, we recognise the value of qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods strategies of inquiry and aim to promote quality, ethical research that informs and develops counselling and psychotherapy practice. We are a journal of the British Association of Counselling and Psychotherapy, promoting reflexive research strongly linked to practice, ensuring research remains relevant to practice, and for practice to continue to inform research development. Counselling and Psychotherapy Research (CPR) is an international peer-reviewed journal dedicated to linking research with practice in counselling and psychotherapy. It aims to promote high-quality, ethical research that influences, informs and develops counselling and psychotherapy practice. Counselling and Psychotherapy Research (CPR) is an innovative international peer-reviewed journal dedicated to linking research with practice. Pluralist in orientation, the journal recognises the value of qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods strategies of inquiry and aims to promote high-quality, ethical research that informs and develops counselling and psychotherapy research, practice, policy, service provision, and training. CPR is a journal of the British Association of Counselling and Psychotherapy, promoting reflexive research strongly linked to practice, and aims to ensure that research remains relevant to practice, and for practice to continue to inform research development. CPR recognises the importance of research in shaping mental health policies and practices and advocates for evidence-based policy recommendations. The scope of CPR is inclusive of a broad and diverse range of research topics and methodologies and invites articles that make clear contributions to counselling and psychotherapy practice, policy, service provision, or training. CPR puts high value on the co-production of research and the use of compassionate and culturally sensitive methods. Examples of methodologies can include clinical trials, individuals’ experiences of counselling and psychotherapy, systematic case studies, measure developments, observational studies, or systematic reviews.
Counselling and Psychotherapy Research (CPR) is :-
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International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, Counselling, systematic case studies, measure developments, observational studies, psychotherapy practice, Anti-Oppressive Practice, Psychotherapy, Clinical Psychology, Mental Health, Applied Psychology , Online or Print , Monthly Journal
- UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN P-ISSN: 1473-3145, E-ISSN: 1746-1405, Established: 2001,
- Provides Crossref DOI
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Indexed in: Scopus, WoS, PubMed
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Not indexed in DOAJ, UGC CARE