Adventures in Therapeutic Communities

Adventures in Therapeutic Communities
7th – 10th September
High Leigh Conference Centre, Hertfordshire
The 46th Annual International Conference
This year’s theme
For me, joining and working in a therapeutic community in my late twenties was a great adventure – it was challenging to work in this new way, but also a great relief and something that I didn’t know I was looking for. Belonging to and participating in the day-to-day work of truly therapeutic communities and organisations can be an endlessly enriching experience. Both staff and resident members find themselves developing in new ways, becoming more curious, arriving at new understandings of themselves, and through the practice of group-living and shared-responsibility for the therapeutic programme, they come to recognise how much they have to offer to others in the community and beyond.
Therapeutic Communities (TCs) are grounded in theory and practice which has been gathering knowledge and experience for over 80 years. These services were traditionally based in psychoanalytic processes expressed at the social level and were alternatives to traditional psychiatry. TCs engage resident / members as whole persons, with competence and capacity to address their difficulties and histories within groups and communities where peer-support and mutually beneficial relationships are seen as inherently therapeutic.
How are such approaches developing today, and how do they compare with standardised and sometimes manualised models of treatment? We would like to hear about your adventures in theory and practice: your stories, histories, theories and approaches. We want to celebrate therapeutic communities in all their manifestations and all who have worked, lived in and continue to contribute to their development and survival.
Whether you are in a therapeutic community, an enabling environment, a therapeutic childcare setting or aspiring to work in a less medicalised and more relational and value-based way, come and find your place.
This event is designed for those who work with Children and Young People, in Education, Adult Mental Health settings, the Criminal Justice and HMPP or Addictions services, and for anyone who has lived-experience of such settings. We hope that you will recognised that the values of TCTC mean that all people are welcome – people of colour, and those identifying as LGBTQ+ or non-binary, and anyone else who may not have attended our events before. We believe everyone can bring something of value and find value in our community.
Chris Nicholson- Chair
Guidance on call for papers
We invite submissions of abstracts of no more than 300 words for keynote presentations, research papers and for workshops which explore this title theme in creative and diverse ways. Please share innovative and imaginative practice from group, community and relational settings.
Since ours is an inclusive event, for practitioners thinking about and sharing their work, for those with lived experience, as well as those presenting new ideas and research, please gear presentations to the widest audience.
Possible themes, topics and question for papers or workshops to address
- Adventures:
- What are the new adventures happening in the national and international world of therapeutic communities?
- How can the thriving world of therapeutic communities, enabling environments and other psychologically-informed environments inspire, influence and improve the wider landscape of mental health services?
- What are the exciting the futures for therapeutic communities and enabling environments?
- How successfully are other methodologies and approaches (Relational Practice; Threat, Power, Meaning; Mentalisation-Based Therapy, THRIVE etc) incorporated in therapeutic communities
- Critical appraisals of contemporary models and approaches to mental health
- Is ‘community’ itself the method – in other words, the technology of therapeutic change? If so, how can we unpack and explain this ‘technology of therapeutic change’?
- Is TC a form of psychotherapy at the social level or just a place where different kinds of therapy happen?
- Histories:
- New or critical histories of therapeutic communities
- How is your TC/organisation establishing a narrative identity, to support or replace an absent or distorted family narrative structure for residents/members?
- Are there organisations using therapeutic community approaches?
- Narratives:
- How are therapeutic communities, enabling environments and other psychologically-informed environments being narrated to the public, service commissioners, or government?
- How can you tell your own story of therapeutic development? What elements – moments – people – places – were important to you?
- Unsung heroes: profiling key people who have not been recognised for their contribution to TCs
- Arts and Culture
- How is art, music, dance, literature, drama used in your community or service?
- How can we understand and articulate our approach in a way that has social and political influence?
- How have therapeutic communities been represented in the arts, film and music?
Please send your proposal to admin@therapeuticcommunities.org
by
Friday 31st May 2025
We can support contributor’s in developing their papers to be developed for inclusion in the Journal or Newsletter.
Confirmed Speakers
Special Lecture: Dr Chris Nicholson
Sunday 7th September
ADHD and the Medicalisation Of Everyday Life’
Confirmed Speaker: Dr Deborah Judge
Dr Deborah Judge’s presentation will explore the questions, ideas and possible solutions that they have been exploring with Birribi over the last 10 years.
If we aim to improve outcomes for children in our care then what is it that we do and how do we do it? What makes the difference?
High Leigh Conference Centre, Hertfordshire
Lord Street, Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire EN11 8SGhighleigh@cct.org.uk
By road
Postcode – EN11 8SG
what3words – ///lived.being.pure
High Leigh is seven miles from the M25
From Junction 25, take the northbound A10 dual carriageway towards Hertford.
Leave the A10 at the junction for Hoddesdon and follow the road towards the town.
At the roundabout take the third exit signed ‘Town Centre’ (alongside Morrisons).
Turn right at the church into Pauls Lane and bear left into Taverners Way.
Take the first right into Lord Street and continue up the hill for just under a mile.
High Leigh is on the left.
By rail
Our local Railway station is Broxbourne
There is a regular service from London Liverpool Street, which also connects with the Underground Victoria Line at Seven Sisters or Tottenham Hale.
Book tickets through trainline
The station is two miles from the Centre, but there are plenty of taxis at reasonable rates (typically £6).
By air
Our local airport is Stansted
Stansted Airport is 40 minutes away by road or a 35 minute train journey from Broxbourne

Subsidy Fund
Please note the application for the subsidy fund is open: Application for Subsidy Fund for Annual Conference 2024 Survey (surveymonkey.com)
This fund is open to all. The fund will be split equitably to all applicants, regardless of the ticket they seek to buy. As this fund is open to donations currently, the fund can not currently be specified. The ticket will need to be processed manually through admin@therapeuticcommunities.org so the appropriate discount can be made.
Book your tickets!
For further information, please contact us via admin@therapeuticcommunities.org
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