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Journal ArticleDOI

Attachment and Loss, Volume I: Attachment

Anthony Giddens, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1970 - 
- Vol. 21, Iss: 1, pp 111
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This article is published in British Journal of Sociology.The article was published on 1970-03-01. It has received 1225 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Volume (thermodynamics).

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The Inventory of Teacher-Student Relationships: Factor Structure, Reliability, and Validity Among African American Youth in Low-Income Urban Schools

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the factor structure, reliability, and validity of the IT-SR, a measure that was developed by adapting the widely used Inventory of Parent and Peer Attachments (Armsden & Greenberg, 1987) for use in the context of teacher-student relationships.
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Imagining Fear: Attachment, Threat, and Psychic Experience

TL;DR: In this article, the theoretical and clinical implications of Bowlby's emphasis on fear and the search for safety have been largely overlooked, and it helps us find language that brings alive or mentalizes these aspects of the pat...
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Web-based training for foster, adoptive, and kinship parents

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the effectiveness of two online courses on lying and sexualized behavior with a sample of foster parents from the Foster and Kinship Care Education Program of California Community Colleges.
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Psychoanalysis, attachment, and spirituality part i: the emergence of two relational traditions

TL;DR: Two broad relational traditions emerged in post-Freudian psychoanalysis: a broad group of relational theories represented by Fairbairn's (1952) object relations theory, that remained within the literature as discussed by the authors.
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Attachment Insecurity Moderates the Relationship Between Disease Activity and Depressive Symptoms in Ulcerative Colitis

TL;DR: Attachment anxiety meets all tested criteria as a moderator of the relationship between disease activity and depressive symptoms, and it is confirmed that these dimensions are stable.
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Book

Attachment and Loss

John Bowlby
Book ChapterDOI

The influence of early environment in the development of neurosis and neurotic character

TL;DR: The authors examined a preliminary survey of the soil conditions with a few suggestions regarding their interaction with the organism and discussed the environmental factors which are operative during the child's earliest years and which appear so to influence the development of the child character that they may reasonably be termed factors responsible for neurosis.
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