psychology_Sons_(2003)

(Elle) #1
References 553

Grisso, T. (1991). A developmental history of the American
Psychology–Law Society.Law and Human Behavior, 15,213–231.
Gundlach, H. U. K. (1997). Psychological associations and soci-
eties. In W. G. Bringmann, H. E. Luck, R. Miller, & C. E. Early
(Eds.),A pictorial history of psychology(pp. 536–540). Chicago:
Quintessence Books.


Gundlach, H. U. K. (1998). An outline of the history of the IAAP
and its first thirteen congresses. In H. Gundlach (Ed.), Applied
psychology. Vol. 1: The first congress Geneva 1920(pp. 1–24).
London: Routledge.
Guthrie, R. V. (1998). Even the rat was white: A historical view of
psychology.Boston: Allyn & Bacon.


Hagen, J. W. (2000). Society for Research in Child Development.
In A. E. Kazdin (Ed.), Encyclopedia of psychology(Vol. 7,
pp. 377–379). Washington, DC: American Psychological
Association.
Hardcastle, G. (2000). The cult of experiment: The psychological
round table, 1936–1941. History of Psychology, 3,344–370.


Hollander, E. P. (1968). The society of experimental social psychol-
ogy: An historical note. Journal of Personality and Social Psy-
chology, 9,280–282.
Hurvich, L. M. (2000). Society of Experimental Psychologists. In
A. E. Kazdin (Ed.), Encyclopedia of psychology (Vol. 7,
pp. 379–380). Washington, DC: American Psychological
Association.


Jackson, J. P., Jr. (2000). The triumph of the segregationists? A his-
toriographical inquiry into psychology and the Brownlitigation.
History of Psychology, 3,239–261.
Kimmel, P. R. (1997). A history of Division 9 (Society for the Psy-
chological Study of Social Issues). In D. A. Dewsbury (Ed.),
Unification through division: Histories of the divisions of
the American Psychological Association(Vol. 2, pp. 9–53).
Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.


Kaslow, F. W. (1989). Early history of the American Board of Foren-
sic Psychology: A retrospective account. Forensic Reports, 2,
305–311.
Kohler, R. (1982). From medical chemistry to biochemistry: The
making of a biomedical discipline.New York: Cambridge
University Press.


Kohout, J. (2001). Who’s earning those psychology degrees?
Monitor on Psychology, 32,42.
Laughlin, P. R., & Worley, J. L. (1991). Roles of the American Psy-
chological Association and the Veterans Administration in the
development of internships in psychology. American Psycholo-
gist, 46,430–436.


Leong, F. (1995). History of Asian American psychology. AAPA
Monograph, 1,1–54.
Lomax, E. (1977). The Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial:
Some of its contributions to early research in child develop-
ment.Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 13,
283–293.


Lowrey, L. G. (1948). Orthopsychiatry, 1923–1948: Retrospect and
prospect.Menasha, WI: American Orthopsychiatric Association.
Lunt, I. (1996). The history and organization of the European
Federation of Professional Psychologists’Associations (EFPPA).
European Psychologist, 1,60–64.
Lunt, I. (2000). The European Federation of Professional Psycholog-
ical Associations. InEncyclopedia of psychology(Vol. 3, pp. 274–
276). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Mednick, M. T., & Urbanski, L. L. (1991). The origins and activities
of APA’s division of the Psychology of Women. Psychology of
Women Quarterly, 15,651–663.
Napoli, D. S. (1981). Architects of adjustment: The history of the
psychological profession in the United States.Port Washington,
NY: Kennikat Press.
O’Donnell, J. M. (1979). The crisis of experimentalism in the
1920s: E. G. Boring and his uses of history. American Psycholo-
gist, 34, 289–295.
O’Donnell, J. M. (1985). The origins of behaviorism: American
psychology, 1870–1920.New York: New York University Press.
Phillips, L. (2000). Recontextualizing Kenneth B. Clark: An
Afrocentric perspective on the paradoxical legacy of a model
psychologist-activist.History of Psychology, 3,142–167.
Pickren, W. E. (1995). Psychologists and physicians in the border-
lands of science, 1900–1942.Ann Arbor: University of Michigan.
Pickren, W. E., & Dewsbury, D. A. (2002). Psychology between the
World Wars. In W. E. Pickren & D. A. Dewsbury (Eds.), Evolv-
ing perspectives on the history of psychology(pp. 349–352).
Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Raimy, V. C. (1950). Training in clinical psychology.New York:
Prentice-Hall.
Rees, J. R. (1963). World mental health. In A. Deutsch (Ed.), The
encyclopedia of mental health(Vol. 6, pp. 2049–2062). New
York: Franklin Watts.
Rosenzweig, M. R., Holtzman, W. H., Sabourin, M., & Belanger, D.
(2000).History of the International Union of Psychological
Science (IUPsyS).East Essex, England: Psychology Press.
Routh, D. K. (1994). Clinical psychology since 1917: Science, prac-
tice, and organization.New York: Plenum Press.
Russo, N. F., & Dumont, A. (1997). A history of Division 35 (Psychol-
ogy of Women): Origins, issues, activities, future. In D. A.
Dewsbury (Ed.),Unification through division: Histories of the divi-
sions of the American Psychological Association(Vol. 2, pp. 211–
238). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Samelson, F. (1977). World War I intelligence testing and the devel-
opment of psychology. Journal of the History of the Behavioral
Sciences, 13,274–282.
Samelson, F. (1992). The APA between the World Wars: 1918–1941.
In R. B. Evans, V. S. Sexton, & T. C. Cadwallader (Eds.), The
American Psychological Association: A historical perspec-
tive(pp. 119–147). Washington, DC: American Psychological
Association.
Free download pdf