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Journal ArticleDOI

The generalizability of the psychoanalytic concept of the working alliance.

Edward S. Bordin
- 01 Jan 1979 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 3, pp 252-260
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TLDR
Bordin this article reviewed and elaborated the psychoanalytic concept of the working alliance and argued that various modes of psychotherapy can be meaningfully differentiated in terms of the kinds of working alliances embedded in them, and that the strength, rather than the kind of working alliance, will prove to be the major factor in change achieved through psychotherapy.
Abstract
The psychoanalytic concept of the working alliance is reviewed and elaborated. It is argued that various modes of psychotherapy can be meaningfully differentiated in terms of the kinds of working alliances embedded in them. Moreover, the strength, rather than the kind of working alliance, will prove to be the major factor in change achieved through psychotherapy. Strength of alliance will be a function of the goodness of fit of the respective personalities of patient and therapist to the demands of the working alliance. Past research bearing on these propositions and indicated future research are discussed. Extensions to changes sought in teaching and other group processes are briefly touched. Proliferation of psychotherapies has dominated the sixties and seventies. Thirty-six psychotherapies (Harper, 1959) had to be supplemented by an additional compilation (Harper, 1975). Unchecked, this trend would come perilously close to the solipsism, a psychotherapeutic method for each psychotherapist. Not unexpectedly, research in psychotherapy has suffered from an analogous lack of convergence, and with it a disappointing impotence about providing empirical tests of competing claims. As Donald Campbell (1976) suggests, given the wide prevalence of the need for psychotherapy, and the continuing ability of individuals or society to pay for it, the winnowing of this harvest of methods must come from research. Campbell (1976) speaks to the practitioner, exhorting him or her to engage in systematic follow-up. This essay addresses those prac1 An earlier version of this paper was given at the annual meeting of the Society for Psychotherapy, June, 1975. * Requests for reprints should be sent to Edward S. Bordin, Ph.D., University of Michigan Counseling Center, 1007 East Huron Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. titioners who are also research workers, to call attention to a point of view that can encompass most, if not all, approaches to psychotherapy and can lead toward the needed convergence in research. There has been a promising rate of growth of research and research workers, with encouraging trends toward a coming together on basic issues: I aim to contribute to that movement. Moreover, because of the generalizability of my ideas to all change situations, I hope to stimulate research applications to teaching and to community change processes. 1 propose that the working alliance between the person who seeks change and the one who offers to be a change agent is one of the keys, if not the key, to the change process. The working alliance can be defined and elaborated in terms which make it universally applicable, and can be shown to be valuable for integrating knowledge—particularly for pointing to new research directions. As my initial statement suggests, a working alliance between a person seeking change and a change agent can occur in many places besides the locale of psychotherapy. The concept of the working alliance would seem to be applicable in the relation between student and teacher, between community action group and leader, and, with only slight extension, between child and parent. While I believe such extensions to be fruitful, they are beyond the scope of this paper. I shall confine myself to the therapeutic working alliance, making only brief inferences to extensions to other change enterprises.2 2 One might extend the idea of working alliances to nonchange situations. Although prisons, under reform ideology, have been set up as change situations, most observation suggests that staff and inmates typically arrive at a mutually agreed-upon alliance to get through their relationship with as little upset as possible.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Factor structure of the Working Alliance Inventory.

TL;DR: The Working Alliance Inventory (WAI) as discussed by the authors was completed after the 1st psychotherapy session by 84 university counseling center clients and 15 therapists rating their work with 123 clients, and was used to assess therapists' work with their clients.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of therapist characteristics and techniques positively impacting the therapeutic alliance

TL;DR: Therapist's personal attributes such as being flexible, honest, respectful, trustworthy, confident, warm, interested, and open were found to contribute positively to the alliance.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of the therapeutic alliance in psychotherapy.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors trace the development of the therapeutic working alliance from its psychodynamic origins to current pantheoretical formulations and review the research on the alliance under four headings: the relation between a positive alliance and success in therapy, the path of the alliance over time, the examination of variables that predispose individuals to develop a strong alliance, and the exploration of the in-therapy factors that influence the positive alliance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development and validation of a revised short version of the working alliance inventory

TL;DR: This paper evaluated the factor structure of the Working Alliance Inventory (WAI) with confirmatory factor analysis in two relatively large samples (Ns = 231 and 235). The hypothesized structures were not confirmed.
Journal ArticleDOI

How important are the common factors in psychotherapy? An update.

TL;DR: The contextual model of psychotherapy is outlined, and the evidence for four factors related to specificity, including treatment differences, specific ingredients, adherence, and competence, supports the conclusion that the common factors are important for producing the benefits of Psychotherapy.
References
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Book

Persuasion and Healing: A Comparative Study of Psychotherapy

TL;DR: This popular study of "psychological healing"treats topics ranging from religious revivalism and magical healing to contemporary psychotherapies, from the role of the shaman in nonindustrialized societies to the traditional mental hospital.
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The Technique and Practice of Psychoanalysis, Volume 1

TL;DR: In this article, a systematic and comprehensive volume devoted essentially to the fundamentals of psychoanalytic technique: transference and resistance, is devoted to the patient's real relationship to the analyst, the working alliance, and the transference relationship.
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Research in Psychotherapy

TL;DR: Research in psychotherapy as mentioned in this paper is a comprehensive synthesis and assessment of the psychotherapeutic research literature for the use of both researchers and those in clinical practice, which is designed as a general reference work, an instruction guide, and a source of information about specific aspects and problems of research.
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