Expertise
Paul Brown’s especial interests and skills are to find the ways to integrate the inner world of the individual with the outer world of work, relationships, family, the pursuit of pleasures and whole life development.
He works both with individuals and organisations.
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With individuals, his approach is based upon combining the senior executive coaching skills with whose development he has been involved through the Association for Professional Executive Coaching and Supervision (APECS) with his long-standing clinical background in individual, marital and relationship therapy, where he has been an original researcher. He is currently in detailed discussion with two London law firms about how they might develop their own policies and practices for the retention of senior women in their Firms.
Paul Brown leads practice about the application of the new brain sciences to organisational behaviour, coaching,and leadership. He is active in teaching professional colleagues an understanding of how the modern neurosciences are changing our understanding of the way human beings really work. His focus is upon the way that energy can transformed into profit ratgher than be blocked. He has introduced the idea of the limbic leader and how change - both personal and organisational - may be brought about through understanding the resonating transmitters and receivers of the limbic system of the brain.
He knows that at last there is a chance of moving away from the descriptive models of almost all management and psychological consulting into the possibility of explanatory models that are much more economic of time, effort and cost in producing real growth and change.
Professional affiliations: Paul is a founder member and past Chair of the Association for Professional Executive Coaching and Supervision (APECS); a founder member of the Association of Business Psychologists; a Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine; and was for nearly forty years a member and then Chartered Clinical and Organisational Psychologist of the British Psychological Society, and an elected and ex officio member of its Council, where he was also at one time the Registrar of the Clinical Board of Examiners, until he left the BPS in 2001 in despair at its continued failure to represent professional interests to the general public. He was Justice of the Peace in Marylebone for ten years, founded and edited for five years what is now an international peer-review Journal, and was at one time a Moderator and External Examiner at the Tavistock Clinic.
