@article { , title = {Positive psychology: A movement to reintegrate career counselling within counselling psychology}, abstract = {Content \& Focus: In the UK career counselling has tended to evolve separately from the counselling psychology profession. Elsewhere, notably in North America, counselling psychology does embrace career issues. This paper explores the contested boundaries between career and therapeutic work, and identifies positive psychology as a movement that transcends the divide. There is potential for positive psychology to reintegrate a career focus into counselling psychology. Conclusions: Although it does not provide a general theory of career choice and development, positive psychology has resonance with career counselling. It provides a rigorous conceptual and empirical foundation linking vocation to wellbeing. An evidence-based career counselling is beginning to emerge. Positive psychology presents a challenge to the current boundaries of the UK counselling psychology profession by demanding a holistic view of well-being that encompasses work and career.}, issn = {0269-6975}, issue = {3}, journal = {Counselling Psychology Review}, pages = {26-35}, publicationstatus = {Published}, publisher = {British Psychological Society}, url = {http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/377860}, volume = {30}, keyword = {331 Labor economics, 378 Higher education, HF Commerce, LB2300 Higher Education, Employability, Mental health, Coaching, Health, positive psychology, career counselling, counselling psychology, identity}, year = {2015}, author = {Robertson, Peter} }