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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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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A social and physical inter-generational computer game for the elderly and children: Age Invaders

TL;DR: "Age Invaders" is introduced, a novel game which allows the elderly to play harmoniously together with children in physical space and allows natural social-physical interactions amongst generations, both physically and through the Internet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Narratives of infants’ encounters with curriculum: Beyond the curriculum of care

TL;DR: The possibility to see beyond traditional perceptions of infants as objects of the attachment relationship is suggested, and the potential for infants to be viewed as ‘initiators’ who guide educators’ responses is identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attachment Orientations Guide the Transfer of Leadership Judgments: Culture Matters:

TL;DR: The role of global and relationship-specific attachment orientations in leader transference, a social-cognitive process in which mental representations of past leaders are associated with the evaluations of new, similar leaders, is tested, informing emerging views on relational social- cognitive processes in leader–follower interactions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trauma, Attachment, and Spirituality: A Case Study:

TL;DR: In this paper, an in-depth case study of a patient with complex traumatic stress that was treated from a long-term attachment-based psychoanalytic modality is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outcomes among young adults placed in therapeutic residential care as children

TL;DR: It appeared, from the information they gave in these interviews, that young adults who have been in therapeutic residential care can have good outcomes in terms of their emotional and behavioural well‐being, physical health, accommodation, and absence of early parenthood and substance use.
References
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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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