Van Deurzen has published 20 academic books, 70 chapters and well over 100 papers in journals. She published her first chapter on
existential therapy in 1984 in Windy Dryden's H
andbook on individual psychotherapy. Her first book on her existential approach to psychotherapy and counselling was published in 1987 with Sage, has known several editions and continues to be a bestseller. Drawing on the work of
Ludwig Binswanger and her own clinical observations, she conceptualized a four-world model of human existence—physical (Umwelt), social (Mitwelt), personal (Eigenwelt), and spiritual (Überwelt). The originality of the model is further enhanced by its emphasis on the paradoxical nature of each dimension, showing the dialectical movement between polarities and inevitable tensions at each level. It became the basis of her method of Structural Existential Analysis.
Existential Counselling and Psychotherapy (1987–1990s) Van Deurzen's first major book,
Existential Counselling in Practice (1987), later republished in expanded editions, articulated her therapeutic approach in accessible language. She introduced the "
emotional compass" to map emotions across the four existential dimensions, linking them to human values. In 1988, she co-founded the Society for Existential Analysis and in 1993 became a key figure in professional regulation as the first elected Chair of the
UK Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP). Her third major work,
Paradox and Passion (1998), reflected on emotional tensions and personal experience, including her early struggles with suicidality. Throughout the 2000s, she published extensively, including the co-authored
Dictionary of Existential Psychotherapy and Counselling (2005) and several edited volumes on existential perspectives in supervision, coaching, and relationships. With Martin Adams, she co-authored
Skills in Existential Counselling & Psychotherapy (2011), a practical guide for clinicians.
Existential-Phenomenological Research and Structural Methodology (2010s–2020s) Van Deurzen developed a research method rooted in existential therapy, integrating phenomenological, hermeneutic, heuristic, and narrative elements. Her
Structural Existential Analysis (co-authored with Claire Arnold-Baker, 2022) formalized this approach, using five existential lenses—Space, Time, Purpose, Paradox, and Passion—and introduced the Existential Research Dialogue (ERD), a dialogical interview technique. She served as senior editor of
The Wiley World Handbook of Existential Therapy (2019), the most comprehensive text in the field, bringing together leading figures like
Irvin Yalom, Alfried Laengle, and
Kirk Schneider. In 2014, van Deurzen and her husband
Digby Tantam created the Existential Academy, a community interest company, in West Hampstead, on Fortune Green Road, where they offer five masters programmes and two doctoral programmes in conjunction with
Middlesex University, as well as a range of short courses. She founded the Voices for Europe initiative and served as Vice Chair of the New Europeans. She organized free counselling services for affected populations and gave public speeches, including at several major protests in Parliament Square. The Existential Academy also provided free emotional support services for Ukrainians who took refuge in the UK during the UK/Russian war and to all those affected by the war between Israel and Gaza. Her more recent book
Rising from Existential Crisis (2022) addressed the psychological effects of sociopolitical trauma and immigration. She also wrote and produced the documentary
Bringing Wisdom to the World (2023), promoting the Existential Movement, which aims to infuse public discourse with philosophical and existential insight. In 2022, she signed with
Penguin for
Beginning to Live: The Art of Existential Freedom, a popularized account of her therapeutic wisdom. == Personal life ==