Spelling suggestions: "subject:"interpersonal relations -- case studies"" "subject:"interpersonal relations -- base studies""
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An experimental communication program for premarital/dating couplesHeitland, William C. January 1977 (has links)
There is no abstract available for this dissertation.
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Social structure and interpersonal relations in a community in Northern IrelandMcDougall, Lorna January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
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Commitment in long term cohabiting couplesGalway, Alison 04 May 2010 (has links)
Researchers on close relationships presupposed marriage as a central measure of successful commitment and identified a mix of structural and personal motives underlying commitment. Debate on how to measure and predict commitment has been prompted by its conceptual complexity and the importance of its role in relationship maintenance.
This study focused on five couples together for at least 13 years outside the institutional grooves and prescribed roles of marriage. Johnson's (1991a) social-psychological model of commitment types embedded within a social structure guided the research. The couples defined commitment, discussed a challenging time in the maintenance of their relationship, and responded to specific questions.
Data analysis resulted in development of a three dimensional model of commitment phenomenology. Dimensions include types of commitment from Johnson's model (1991a); commitment contexts of time and society expanded from Johnson's model; and the expression of commitment (awareness, salience, plans, or behavior) implied in Johnson's model but made explicit in this model. / Master of Science
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Etude des représentations psycho-sociales: approche interactionniste des processus d'intégration socialeVanandruel, Martine January 1980 (has links)
Doctorat en sciences psychologiques / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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A psychoanalytic approach to organizational decline: Bowen theory as a tool for organizational analysisFramer, Barbara S. 24 October 2005 (has links)
An approach to organizations which views them as social constructions provides new insights into the phenomenon of organizational decline. In this view, organizations are seen not as objective entities, but, rather, are viewed as products of the human beings who comprise their membership. This view also sees human beings as actors whose behavior is governed not only by rationality, but also by unconscious processes. Any full understanding of organizational action requires an appreciation of the extent to which human beings are governed by the dynamics of the psyche, which operates outside of conscious awareness. An approach to organizational decline which encompasses these assumptions examines how the members of the organization consciously and! or unconsciously collaborate to create the conditions of decline.
This research begins with a psychoanalytic model of human behavior, Bowen Theory, which explains how individuals function within relationship systems such as families and organizations. The theory also examines how dysfunction is created within those systems when the relationship process becomes ineffective or dysfunctional. Using the case study method, the dissertation describes how the decline experienced by three distinct organizations can be understood as a consequence of the relationship process created and sustained by the participants in each of the organization's human system. / Ph. D.
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