After the Second World War, the Tavistock Clinic benefited from the
Northfield Hospital experience and from the arrival of talented professionals from Europe, many fleeing
Nazi persecution. In 1948, it became a leading clinic within the newly created
National Health Service. At this point, its education and training services were managed separately by the
Tavistock Institute for Medical Psychology, which was also the umbrella for the
Tavistock Institute, involved in social action research and thinking about group relations and organisational dynamics, and for work with marital couples. The clinic was managed on a democratic model by a professional committee and further developed its distinct focus on
multi-disciplinary and community-centred work. At the Clinic's centenary in 2020, many post-war Tavistock staff contributed personal chapters in "The Tavistock Century" (edited by Margot Waddell and Sebastian Kraemer, Phoenix Publishing House https://firingthemind.com/product/9781912691715/)
Children and young people New developments in child and adolescent mental health were particularly fruitful in the immediate post-war period. In 1948, the creation of the children's department supported the development of training in child and adolescent psychotherapy. Dr
John Bowlby supported this new training and naturalistic
infant observation. He also developed Attachment Theory. Husband and wife clinicians
James Robertson and
Joyce Robertson showed in their film work the impact of
separation in temporary substitute care on young children, for example, when their parent was admitted to hospital. The Australian
Hazel Harrison was teacher-in-charge from 1954 to 1956, where she worked with Bowlby. They looked in detail at English pre-school education. The Tavistock Clinic opened its
Adolescent Department in 1959, recognising the distinctive developmental needs and difficulties of younger and older adolescents. In 1967, it absorbed the
London Child Guidance Clinic, founded in 1929. In 1989, the Tavistock established the
Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS), a highly specialised clinic for young people presenting with difficulties with their gender identity. In July 2022, following a critical independent review from
Hilary Cass, it was announced that this service would be discontinued and replaced with regional clinics providing a more "holistic" approach.
Organisational consultancy by former CEO Anton Obholzer, featured in the TV series, and their edited collection, with Vega Roberts, 'The Unconscious at Work: Individual and Organizational Stress in the Human Services', remains one of the classic texts to emerge from the Tavistock Clinic.
Public sphere The Tavistock's tradition of social and political engagement has been renewed in recent years through its programme of Policy Seminars which model a dialogic, exploratory approach to policy analysis and debate with the
social epidemiologist,
Richard G. Wilkinson, the psychologist,
Oliver James and the columnist,
Polly Toynbee, among recent contributors. The series of
Thinking Space events follows a similar model of participatory engagement around themes of diversity, racism, and sexual orientation. The
Tavistock Institute, which had been part of the Tavistock family, moved to its own premises in 1994. The Tavistock Centre for Couples Relationships, TCCR, formerly the Tavistock Institute of Marital Studies, was always a separate, charitably-funded organisation which left the Tavistock Centre for new premises in 2009. ==NHS Trust==