News Bulletin

The IAAP News Bulletin is a monthly email newsletter. Click on the image below to access the current and previous  issues.

About the IAAP

The International Association for Analytical Psychology, IAAP was founded in 1955 by a group of Jungian Analysts to sustain and promote the work of C. G. Jung. Today the IAAP recognizes 81 Group Members (societies) throughout the world, and around 4’000 analysts trained in accordance with standards established by the Association.

Since the late 1990’s the IAAP has provided training possibilities for people who live in places where no registered training to become a Jungian Analyst is available. Consequently the IAAP has now training facilities and qualified Jungian Analysts in all continents.

Outreach in the IAAP

Turning earth right way

The IAAP supports projects provided by Jungian Analysts, candidates and routers supporting victims of

natural disasters, pandemics, conflict, poverty, and oppression.

Support our outreach efforts
Please note that 100% of all donations will be distributed directly to member projects. To donate, click below:
 

News Bulletin

The IAAP New Bulletin is a monthly email newsletter. Click on the image below to access the current and previous  issues.

About the IAAP

The International Association for Analytical Psychology, IAAP was founded in 1955 by a group of Jungian Analysts to sustain and promote the work of C. G. Jung. Today the IAAP recognizes 81 Group Members (societies) throughout the world, and around 4’000 analysts trained in accordance with standards established by the Association.

Since the late 1990’s the IAAP has provided training possibilities for people who live in places where no registered training to become a Jungian Analyst is available. Consequently the IAAP has now training facilities and qualified Jungian Analysts in all continents.

Outreach in the IAAP

Turning earth right way

The IAAP supports victims of natural disasters, pandemics, conflict, poverty, and oppression.

Our Outreach Working Party also helps new groups in remote areas prepare for IAAP training facilities.
Click here to read more or to apply for a grant.

Support our outreach efforts
Donations are tax-deductible in the U.S. and many other countries, thanks to the Philemon Foundation. To donate, click below:

News Bulletin

The IAAP New Bulletin is a monthly email newsletter. Click on the image below to access the current and previous  issues.

About the IAAP

The International Association for Analytical Psychology, IAAP was founded in 1955 by a group of Jungian Analysts to sustain and promote the work of C. G. Jung. Today the IAAP recognizes 81 Group Members (societies) throughout the world, and around 4’000 analysts trained in accordance with standards established by the Association.

Since the late 1990’s the IAAP has provided training possibilities for people who live in places where no registered training to become a Jungian Analyst is available. Consequently the IAAP has now training facilities and qualified Jungian Analysts in all continents.

Outreach in the IAAP

Turning earth right way

The IAAP supports victims of natural disasters, pandemics, conflict, poverty, and oppression.

Our Outreach Working Party also helps new groups in remote areas prepare for IAAP training facilities.
Click here for more information or to apply for a grant.

Support our outreach efforts
Donations are tax-deductible in the U.S. and many other countries, thanks to the Philemon Foundation. To donate, click below:

News Bulletin

The IAAP New Bulletin is a monthly email newsletter. Click on the image below to access the current and previous  issues.

About the IAAP

The International Association for Analytical Psychology, IAAP was founded in 1955 by a group of Jungian Analysts to sustain and promote the work of C. G. Jung. Today the IAAP recognizes 81 Group Members (societies) throughout the world, and around 4’000 analysts trained in accordance with standards established by the Association.

Since the late 1990’s the IAAP has provided training possibilities for people who live in places where no registered training to become a Jungian Analyst is available. Consequently the IAAP has now training facilities and qualified Jungian Analysts in all continents.

Outreach in the IAAP

Turning earth right way

The IAAP supports victims of natural disasters, pandemics, conflict, poverty, and oppression.

Our Outreach Working Party also helps new groups in remote areas prepare for IAAP training facilities.
Click here for more information or to apply for a grant.

Support our outreach efforts
Donations are tax-deductible in the U.S. and many other countries, thanks to the Philemon Foundation. To donate, click below:

The IAAP New Bulletin is a monthly email newsletter. Click on the image above to access the current and previous  issues.

Click here for the subscribe form

About the IAAP

The International Association for Analytical Psychology, IAAP was founded in 1955 by a group of Jungian Analysts to sustain and promote the work of C. G. Jung. Today the IAAP recognizes 81 Group Members (societies) throughout the world, and around 4’000 analysts trained in accordance with standards established by the Association.

Since the late 1990’s the IAAP has been engaged in providing training possibilities for people who live in places where no registered training to become a Jungian Analyst with membership of the IAAP is available. The result of this is that the IAAP now has training facilities and qualified Jungian Analysts in all continents.

Click here to read more about the IAAP

Outreach in the IAAP

Turning earth right way

The IAAP supports victims of natural disasters, pandemics, conflict, poverty, and oppression.

Our Outreach Working Party also helps new groups in remote areas prepare for IAAP training facilities.
Click here for more information or to apply for a grant.

Support our outreach efforts
Donations are tax-deductible in the U.S. and many other countries, thanks to the Philemon Foundation. To donate, click below:

Welcome from the President
Latest News
Pilar Amezaga

I am delighted to welcome you to the official website of the International
Association for Analytical Psychology, IAAP. As President of our global
organisation, I, along with my fellow Officers, the Executive Committee and
our dedicated staff, are committed to advancing the field of Analytical Psychology worldwide.
Our main goals at IAAP are to promote the highest professional, scientific and ethical standards in our association and to ensure that Analytical
Psychology is recognised and valued as a vital field of study and practice.
Thank you for visiting the IAAP website and we hope you find it informative
and interesting.

President IAAP Pilar Amezaga

The Critical Edition of the Works of C. G. Jung

The Critical Edition of the Works of C. G. Jung is a multi-year publishing project presenting new translations of Jung’s writings in a 26-volume chronological series.

The publisher Princeton University Press generously offers a discount for IAAP Members and Routers.

Click HERE to read more

Conferences in the IAAP

A main purpose of the IAAP is to disseminate knowledge of Analytical Psychology and to hold Congresses.

In the slideshow to the right we post upcoming international conferences and in the CALENDAR dropdown at the top-bar, we post these Conferences as well
as Online Lectures and Seminars
and Other Events

 

Announcements

In the Spotlight – Paul Bishop

Paul Bishop was welcomed as an Honorary Member of IAAP at the XXIII International Congress of Analytical Psychology held in August of this year in Zurich.

In the Spotlight – Dajun Liu

I Ching and Jungian Analysis: Liu Dajun, Honorary Member of IAAP The 23rd International Congress for Analytical Psychology was held in Zurich (2025), with the theme “The Experience of the Non-understandable”.

Sonu Shamdasani

In the Spotlight – Sonu Shamdasani

Sonu Shamdasani was welcomed as an Honorary Member of IAAP at the XXIII International Congress of Analytical Psychology held in August of this year in Zurich.

CG Jung & Analytical Psychology

IAAP member analysts have written a series of short articles to introduce the key concept of Analytical Psychology which is the formal name for Jungian psychology.

Sonoko Toyoda

Persona

Commonly, in private life, a person takes off his/her social mask and at home wears a more intimate mask. Thus, e. g. a shrewd businessman can be a gentle father with his family. But when the persona is too rigid, or if one strongly identifies with it, then one keeps it on even in private life, and their family might be afflicted or negatively influenced by it. A father who cannot take off his mask of a rigorous teacher when he is at home can sometimes behave in a way that may humiliate his children.

Natalia Serebrennikova

The Shadow

Initially, the shadow is everything that the ego-consciousness does not know about itself, the entire unconscious part of the personality. The shadow represents “a tight passage, a narrow door, whose painful constriction no one is spared who goes down to the deep well.”i As the personality develops, the shadow gradually differentiates into individual and collective one (familial, social group, cultural, archetypal).

Martin Schmidt

The Self

Jung’s thinking about the self separates Jungian analytical psychology from other psychoanalytical schools. He uses the concept of the self to portray his understanding of who we are and the concept of individuation to describe who we can become.

Resources

We are pleased to make the following resources available to the public through our website

Commission by the National Institute of Mental Health the Abstracts of the Collected Works of C.G. Jung were edited by Carrie Lee Rothgeb and Siegfried M. Clemens and originally published in 1978. The book is available in the public domain and all the abstract are viewable on the IAAP website. Click here

The Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism is a pictorial and written archive of mythological, ritualistic, and symbolic images from all over the world and from all epochs of human history. The ARAS website also offers a rich library of articles on art and symbols and a concordance that allows you to search C.G. Jung’s Collected Works by word or topic. 

The IAAP is supporting the initiative by Jungian.Directory to build and maintain a searchable catalogue of articles published in Jungian and Jungian related journals. The catalogue is growing and will soon give access to the contents of close to 45 journals. A number of the journal are open access. Access the searchable catalogue here.

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