Jordan Bate Author

Norka T. Malberg, PsyD, is a certified child and adolescent psychoanalyst trained at the Anna Freud Centre in London. She received her doctorate from University College London for her work on clinical applications of attachment theory for chronically ill adolescents, their families, and medical staff. She is currently in private practice in New Haven, Connecticut. She is also on the clinical faculty at the Yale Child Study Center and teaches and supervises at Yale’s Medical school child psychiatry residency program.

Dr. Malberg is coeditor of the Lines of Development Book Series by Karnac Books for which she coedited the first book: The Anna Freudian Tradition. She is on the editorial board for the Psychoanalytic Study of the Child and the Journal of Infant, Child And Adolescent Psychotherapy. She is the coeditor of the Child and Adolescent Sections of the upcoming PDM-2 (Psychodynamic Diagnostic Manual) edited by Guilford Press and cowriter of the upcoming book by APA press on mentalization based treatment with children. She has authored numerous articles on topics relating to clinical applications of mentalization based therapy, trauma, early childhood intervention and the interface of infant and adult mental health.

Elliot Jurist, PhD, is professor of psychology and philosophy at the Graduate Center and The City College of New York (CCNY), The City University of New York (CUNY). From 2004 to 2013, he served as the director of the Clinical Psychology Doctoral Program, CCNY, CUNY. From 2008 to 2018, he was the editor of Psychoanalytic Psychology, the journal of Division 39 of APA and the author/editor of multiple books.

Jordan Bate, PhD, is an assistant professor in the Combined School-Clinical Child Program, Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University, where she coleads the psychodynamic practicum and teaches courses in beginning work with children, parents, and families and cognitive assessment of children. She is also a supervising psychologist in perinatal and child psychotherapy services at Northwell Health, Lenox Hill Hospital, and maintains a private practice in Manhattan, New York.

Mark Dangerfield, PhD, received his doctorate from Ramón Llull University, Barcelona. He was trained in mentalization-based treatment and the AMBIT model (Adolescent Mentalization-Based Integrative Treatment) at the Anna Freud National Centre for Children and Families in London and was the clinical manager of the pioneering ECID project. The project, which he helped develop at the Vidal and Barraquer Foundation in Barcelona, is based on the AMBIT model and focuses on young people with high psychopathological risk and high risk of social exclusion. He is currently a professor at University Institute of Mental Health of the Ramón Llull University, teaching advanced courses in psychoanalytic psychotherapy and family therapy, and serves as director of the University Institute of Mental Health at Ramón Llull University.