The centre was founded in 1985 by Bice Benvenuto, Professor Bernard Burgoyne,[3] Richard Klein and
Darian Leader. It was established as a charity with the purpose of advancing education for the benefit of the public in particular by the provision of training and seminars in psychoanalysis.
Courses
CFAR offers introductory and advanced courses in psychoanalysis, and trains psychoanalysts within the context of its clinical training programme. Seminars are given by visiting Lacanian analysts from France, Belgium, Spain and Australia.
Publications
The Centre publishes a Journal JCFAR which contains articles on psychoanalytic themes from a Freudian and Lacanian perspective.[4]
In association with Karnac Books CFAR has published The Centre for Freudian Analysis and Research Library[5] which aims to make classic
Lacanian texts available in English for the first time, as well as publishing original research in the
Lacanian field:
The Trainings of the Psychoanalyst by Annie Tardits[7]
Freud and the Desire of the Psychoanalyst by Serge Cottet[8]
Lacan and Levi-Strauss or The Return to Freud (1951–1957) by Markos Zafiropoulos [9]
Challenge to Health Professions Council
In February 2007 the UK Government published a
white paper (‘Trust, Assurance and Safety – The Regulation of Health
Professionals in the 21st Century’ [10]) which stated that "The government is planning to introduce statutory regulation for…psychotherapists and counsellors…"[11] and that "…psychotherapists and counsellors will be regulated by the
Health Professions Council, following that Council’s rigorous process of assessing their regulatory needs and ensuring that its system is capable of accommodating them".[11]
As a response to this proposed regulation by the Health Professions Council (HPC),[12][13][14] CFAR was one of the organisations that contributed to the Maresfield report[15][16] which opposed the suitability of the HPC as a regulating body for the professions of
counselling and
psychotherapy in the UK.[17]
Following on from this report, CFAR was one of six organisations that called for a
judicial review[18] of whether or not the HPC had, in fact, fully assessed the regulatory needs of the professions or properly determined if it was the most appropriate body to provide such regulation.[19][20] On Friday 10 December 2010, a Judicial Review Permission Hearing[21] under The Hon. Mr Justice Burton at the
Royal Courts of Justice found against the Health Professions Council[22][23][24] and granted permission to proceed towards a Judicial Review of the proposals for regulation under the HPC. On 16 February 2011 the UK government — in its
command paper ‘Enabling Excellence’ [25] — halted the project to regulate counselling, psychotherapy and other talking treatments via the HPC.