mandelas_5.png
 
Jung-Mandala.jpg
 

ANZSJA (Australian and New zealand Society of Jungian ANalysts)

Australian and New Zealand Society of Jungian Analysts is a professional body of Jungian analysts, whose members provide analysis and psychotherapy. ANZSJA offers an IAAP approved in-depth training to become a Jungian analyst and holds regular professional development events for clinicians and for those interested in exploring the depth of the human psyche.


IAAP (International Association for Analytical Psychology)

The International Association for Analytical Psychology was founded in 1955 by a group of psychoanalysts to sustain and promote the work of C. G. Jung.  Today the IAAP recognizes 64 groups and societies throughout the world, and over 3000 analysts trained in accordance with standards established by the Association.  The Association and its members support triennial congresses, as well as other academic and clinical meetings, that advance research in depth psychology.


AGAP (The Association of Graduates in ANalytical PSychology)

The Association of Graduates in Analytical Psychology is an internatonal professional group of Jungian analysts, founded in 1954 by the first graduates of the C.G. Jung Institute Zürich. AGAP still upholds the founding purpose, which is to further and develop C.G. Jung’s Analytical Psychology and the professional interests of our members. The association’s legal domicile is the Canton of Zürich in Switzerland, and the official languages are English and German. The vast majority of the members are graduates of full-time, residency-based analytic training programs in Zürich—either at the C.G. Jung Institute, or at AGAP’s own International School of Analytical Psychology.