Klonsky, E. D. (2009). The functions of self-injury in young adults who cut themselves: Clarifying the evidence for affect-regulation. Psychiatry Research, 166(2-3), 260-268.
Ivanhoff, A., Linehan, M. M., & Brown, M. (2001). Dialectical behavior therapy for impulsive self-injurious behaviors. InD. Simeon, & E. Hollander (Eds.) Self-injurious behaviors: assessment and treatment (pp. 149-173). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.
Deiter, P. J., Nocholls, S. S., & Pearlman, L. A. (2000). Self-injury and self-capacities: Assisting an individual in crisis. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 56(9), 1173-1191.
Chapman, A. L., Gratz K. L., & Brown, M. Z. (2006). Solving the puzzle of deliberate self-harm: The experiential avoidance model. Behavior Research and Therapy, 44, 372–394.
This is an encouraging and burgeoning Canadian resource with researchers from the University of Guelph and McGill behind it.
From their website (2013): “As part of a collaboration between the University of Guelph and McGill University, we are a non-profit outreach initiative providing information and resources about self-injury to those who self injure, those who have recovered, and those who want to help”.
Written by Gerrilyn Smith, Dee Cox, and Jacqui Saradjian, (c) 1998, London: The Women’s Press Ltd.. A book written for women who self-injure and those who want to support them. Has a particular focus on those who have experienced abuse, repeated invalidation, or other trauma.