While alleged recovered memories of childhood sexual abuse may not emerge as the primary psychological issue of the 1990s as Read (U. of Lethbridge; Alberta, Canada) and Lindsay (U. of Wales and U. of Victoria, Canada) predict, it is clearly a sensitive focus of escalating statistics, politicization, legal controversies, and the need to reconcile historical tensions between clinical and experimental psychology. Experts' divergent views on the relationship between trauma, repression, and delayed memory are communicated via 13 primary lectures, 21 brief papers, five working group reports, and poster session abstracts. Clinical practice guidelines are proposed. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.