The Foundation's list of helpful resources
- A list of helpful documents, links, references, and
reprints.
- Note: clicking on a link may take you to a document within
this web site, or to a location elsewhere on the web. To return to
this resource listing, use your browser's BACK button. You may have to
click the BACK button several times depending on how many links you
have followed. Also keep in mind that the Internet is ephemeral and
some links may not work properly. Please report finicky links to the
Foundation by clicking on the CONTACT button above.
-
Grantmaker's
Checklist (COF) - this is a checklist for grantmakers published by the
Council on Foundations. This checklist will help grantseekers (and the
general public) to evaluate a grantmaker's giving program.
-
Grantmaker's
Checklist (NCCN) - this is a checklist for grantmakers published by the
North Carolina Center for Nonprofits. This checklist will help grantseekers (and the
general public) to evaluate a grantmaker's giving program.
-
Grantseeker's Checklist - this is a
checklist for grantseekers published by CD Publications. This
checklist will help grantseekers to plan, create, and present a grant
proposal to a funding agency.
-
Program Evaluation Checklist - this
is a checklist for organizations written by Carter McNamara, Ph.D.
This checklist might prove useful in planning evaluations for
programs.
-
Attachment Primer - this
article by Dr. Norborsky—a leading researcher in
the area of disorganized attachment patterns—is a good primer on
attachment and attachment theory (includes reference list).
-
Adopting an Attachment Perspective
- this article by the Foundation's president is a good primer on how
non-profit organizations can begin to incorporate attachment theory
into their programs and projects.
-
Mentalization Factoids - this article
by the Foundation's president is a “cheat sheet” that briefly
describes and defines the process of mentalization—the ability
to perceive and communicate mental states, such as beliefs, desires,
plans, and goals. These factoids were culled from the pages of an
edited volume by Chris Frith and Daniel Wolpert (see the reference
list below).
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What is Infant and Preschool Mental Health?
- this article comes to us by way of the YCS (Youth
Consultation Service) Institute for Infant and
Preschool Mental Health. This article does a good job of defining the
areas of infant and preschool mental health. The article also talks
about why it is important for mental health care professionals to
receive specialized training in the areas of infant and preschool
mental health. The article briefly mentions the training programs
available through YCS. For an expanded version of this document,
please see the article by G. Costas in the REPRINTS section below.
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“Rebirthing,” “Rage Reduction,” “Attachment
Therapy,” or “Holding Therapy” - this link is to an excerpt
taken from the narrative of a grant proposal submitted to the
Foundation by Robert Marvin, Ph.D., in support of the Circle of
Security Project. Frederick Leonhardt, the Foundation's president, in
reviewing this grant request, was impressed by the information this
narrative contained on taking a cautious stance towards treatment
modalities that go by such names as “Rebirthing,” “Rage Reduction,”
“Attachment Therapy,” or “Holding Therapy.”
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Center on Infant Mental Health and Development
at the University of Washington - this is a link to the
November 2003 issue of Centerlines (a publication put out by the CIMHD).
This newsletter (in PDF format) talks about a new Birth to Three
Research Lab at the CIMHD. The lab is designed “to
provide the local community with the benefits of the latest research
in early development while also supporting further investigations into
the important role attachment plays in the healthy social and
emotional growth of children” (quoting
from the newsletter). Click on this link to get to the
home page for the CIMHD.
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Coordinating Attachment and Permanency (CAP)
Project Final Report - this is a link to a report put out
by The Adoption Center at Bellefaire JCB located in Shaker Heights,
Ohio. The CAP Final Report summarizes a three-year study that was
designed to find therapeutic interventions capable of mitigating
disruptions to attachment patterns and functioning in situations where
children may be facing adoption, foster care, or reunification with
parents. This report outlines how the CAP Program was successful in
developing “a consistent, proactive
therapeutic approach to increase attachment security between the child
and their primary, and hopefully permanent, caregiver by addressing
issues of emotional turmoil, ambiguity, loss, grief, and attachment.”
This report contains a good primer on attachment theory as well as how
attachment theory can be applied to the areas of adoption, foster
care, and parental loss. The link is to a PDF file (464K).
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Irving B. Harris Training Center for Infant and
Toddler Development - this is a link to the Harris Center
home page. The center is housed at the University of Minnesota. Harris
Center researchers and personnel have knowledge and expertise in
such areas as “attachment theory, research
and application; early child development including early brain
development; parent-child relationships; and early intervention and
prevention, particularly the use of relationship-based perspectives in
service delivery” (quoting from their web site).
The FHL Foundation supports the idea of using relationship-based
perspectives in developing and delivering services. This web site also
contains a number of links to resources on attachment theory for both
parents and professionals.
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Great Ideas in Personality - this is
a link to a web site maintained by G. Scott Acton, Ph.D. This web site
has a lot of general interest information on personality theories and
research. There is a particularly good section on attachment theory
(which is where this link goes). This section also contains articles
that criticize attachment theory and point out its limitations (well
worth reading). Many of these criticisms stem from the fact that, over
time, attachment theory has moved away from its roots as a theory of
social change. Here at the Foundation we are trying to bring back the
“social change” aspects of attachment theory.
While visiting this web site you may want to read up on
cognitive theories of personality development.
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National Center for Mental Health Promotion and
Youth Violence Prevention - this is a link to the
Conferences & Proceedings area of the NCMHPYVP's web site. On this
page you will find a link to a PowerPoint presentation by Allan Schore
(a leading attachment researcher) entitled “Neuroscience:
Informing Attachment Theory and Children's Mental Health”
(it's a big file - 9.0 megs). Interestingly enough, this page also
contains a link to a PowerPoint presentation entitled
“ePhilanthropy:
Where Charitable Giving and Technology Meet.”
This presentation is by Ted Hart and is part of a sustainability
workshop for nonprofits (1.7 megs). Mr. Hart's presentation is
designed to inform nonprofits on how they can bring an ePhilanthropy
perspective to both their fundraising and advocacy efforts. What are the odds of these two presentations
appearing together on the same page (we had nothing to do with it,
honest).
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Psyche Matters Web Site - this is a
link to the Psyche Matters web site where you will find information on
John Bowlby such as 1) author bibliography, 2) related readings, and
3) other Bowlby links.
-
TAG Technology Survey - this is a
link to the executive summary of the technology survey conducted by
the The Technology Affinity Group (TAG) of the Council on Foundations.
This technology survey looks at how foundations are (or are not) using
technology to aid in the grantmaking process. The link is to a PDF
file (86K).
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When the Bough Breaks - this is a
link to the Filmakers Library listing for the Frontline piece
(original broadcast date 05.02.95) that featured attachment theory and
research. This Frontline piece featured interviews with attachment
theory researchers Alan Sroufe and Robert Karen (a listing for Karen's
book on attachment is shown below). The FHL Foundation has secured copies of this Frontline video
from the Filmakers Library. Use the CONTACT button above if you would
be interested in receiving a copy of this video (nonprofit agencies
only please). Click on
this link to
view summaries and comments.
-
Fifty Years of Attachment Theory -
this is a link to the entry at Amazon.com. This book is written by Sir
Richard Bowlby, John Bowlby's son. The full reference is below. Here's
a review of Sir Richard's book by the Foundation's president:
“I've had the pleasure of hearing Sir
Richard Bowlby speak on three separate occasions. By his own
admission, Sir Richard is not a researcher nor is he a clinician. If
you are looking for information on current attachment theory trends in
either of these two areas, then this book will disappoint. However, if
you are looking for a ‘behind the scenes’
look at attachment theory through the eyes of the
‘son of attachment’ (John Bowlby
being the father), then this is a great little volume. Sir Richard has
a perspective that is hard to find anywhere else. Sir Richard is
eminently qualified to speak on such topics as, ‘After
fifty years, why hasn't attachment theory caught on?’
Sir Richard was there as his father brought together the various
pieces of his theory over a period of decades. Sir Richard was there
through it all—John's
successes and his failures, his triumphs and his misgivings. Sir
Richard is carrying on his father's legacy as attachment theory's most
dedicated public intellectual. If you want a a great
‘behind the scenes’
book, this is a good one. Attachment theory could use a dozen more
just like Sir Richard. I'm sure his father is very proud.”
The FHL Foundation has secured copies of Sir Richard's book from the
publisher. Use the CONTACT button above if you would be interested in
receiving a copy of this book (nonprofit agencies only please).
-
Buenos Aires Attachment Center - this
is a link to the web site for the Attachment Research Center located
in Buenos Aires. This particular institution is devoted to
researching, promoting, and restoring mental health. This web site
contains a wealth of information on attachment theory—well
worth a look.
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The Baby Brain Connection - this is a
link to a web site maintained by the San Francisco Chronicle. This
link will take you to a printable version of an article on the
baby-brain connection. The tagline for this article by Rob Waters
reads: “Armed with new research on developing brain structures, social
workers can help fix troubled baby/parent relationships.”
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Not by Bread Alone: Symbolic Loss, Trauma, and
Recovery in Elephant Communities - this is a link to an
abstract for an article by Gay Bradshaw that looks at trauma, grief,
loss, mourning, and healing within a community of elephants. An
expanded version of this article, co-written with attachment
researcher Allan Schore, has been submitted for publication in the
journal Nature. A pre-release copy of this article is now
available (see below).
-
A Positive Revolution in Change: Appreciative
Inquiry - this is a link to a Word document by David
Cooperrider and Diana Whitney. This article is stored at the web site
for the Taos Institute in Ohio. This article contains
good examples of how adaptive approaches to social change can be
brought about within corporate environments (the large corporate
environments of GTE and Avon are featured). For more on adaptive
approaches to social change, request a copy of the “Leading Boldly”
article by Heifetz & Kania (see below).
Anderegg, D. (2007).
Nerds—Who they are and why we need more of them. New York:
Penguin.
Angier, N. (1999). Woman—An
intimate geography. New York: Houghton
Mifflin.
Baron-Cohen, S. (2003). The
essential difference—The truth about the male & female brain. New
York: Basic Books.
Baron-Cohen, S. (1995).
Mindblindness—An essay on autism and theory of mind. Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press.
von Bertalanffy, L. (1969). General
system theory: Foundations, development and application. New York:
Braziller.
Bloom, H. (1995). The Lucifer
principle—A scientific expedition into the forces of history. New
York: The Atlantic Monthly Press.
Bowlby, J. (1969/1982).
Attachment and loss, vol. I: Attachment (Second Edition). New York:
Basic Books.
Bowlby, J. (1973). Attachment and
loss, vol. II: Separation—Anxiety and anger. New York: Basic Books.
Bowlby, J. (1980). Attachment and
loss, vol. III: Loss—Sadness and depression. New York: Basic Books.
Bowlby, J. (1989). Charles Darwin—A
new life. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
Bowlby, R. (2004). Fifty years of
attachment theory—A lecture given by Sir Richard Bowlby. The Donald
Winnicott Memorial Lecture (London 2004). London: Karnac Books.
Bowring, F. (2003). Science, seeds
and cyborgs—Biotechnology and the appropriation of
life. London: Verso.
Campbell, J. (1990). Transformations
of myth through time. New York: Harper & Row.
Clark, A. (2003). Natural-born
cyborgs—Minds, technologies, and the future of human intelligence.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Csányi, V. (2005). If dogs could
talk—Exploring the canine mind. New York: North Point Press.
Damasio, A. (2003). Looking for
Spinoza—Joy, sorrow and the feeling brain. New York: Harcourt.
Dean, J. (2006). Conservatives
without conscience. New York: Viking.
de Marneffe, D. (2004). Maternal
desire—On children, love, and the inner life. New York: Back Bay
Books.
de Sousa, R. (1987). The rationality
of emotion. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Dowd, M. (2005). Are men
necessary—When sexes collide. New York: Putnam.
Downs, R. & Stea, D. (Eds.). (1973).
Image and environment—Cognitive mapping and spatial behavior. New
Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
Dunbar, R. (1996). Grooming, gossip,
and the evolution of language. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press.
Dunn, J. (2001). The cunning of
unreason—Making sense of politics.
London: HarperCollins.
Eberstadt, M. (2004). Home-alone
America—Why today's kids are overmedicated, overweight, and more
troubled than ever before. New York: Sentinel.
Ellul, J. (1954). The technological
society. New York: Vintage Books.
Ellul, J. (1948/1989). The presence
of the kingdom. Colorado Springs: Helmer's & Howard.
Esser, A. (Ed.). (1971). Behavior
and environment—The use of space by animals and men. Proceedings of
an International Symposium held at the 1968 meeting of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science in Dallas, TX. New York:
Plenum Press.
Fauconnier, G. (1994). Mental
spaces: Aspects of meaning construction in natural languages.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Fauconnier, G. and Turner, M. (2002).
The way we think—Conceptual blending and the mind's hidden
complexities. New York: Basic Books.
Florida, R. (2002).
The rise of the creative class: And how it's
transforming work, leisure, community and everyday life.New York:
Basic Books.
Fogel, A. (1993). Developing through
relationships—Origins of communication, self, and
culture. Chicago: Chicago Press.
Fonagy, P. et al. (2002). Affect
regulation, mentalization, and the development of the self. New
York: Other Press.
Frith, C. & Wolpert, D. (Eds.). (2004).
The neuroscience of social interaction—Decoding, imitating, and
influencing the actions of others. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Fromm, E. (1955). The sane society.
New York: Henry Holt and Company.
Fromm, E. (1956). The art of loving.
New York: HarperCollins.
Fukuyama, F. (2002). Our posthuman
future—Consequences of the technological revolution. New York:
Picador.
Gardner, H. (1983). Frames of
mind—The theory of multiple intelligences. New York: Basic Books.
Gardner, H. (2000).
Intelligence reframed: Multiple intelligences for the
21st century. New York: Basic Books.
Gerhardt, S. (2004). Why love
matters—How affection shapes a baby's brain. New York: Brunner-Routledge.
Golledge, R. (Ed.). (1999).
Wayfinding behavior—Cognitive mapping and other spatial processes.
Baltimore, MD: The John Hopkins University Press.
Graham, E. (2002). Representations
of the post/human: Monsters, aliens and others in popular culture.
New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Hutchins, E. (1995). Cognition in
the wild. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Jacobs, J. (2004). Dark age ahead.
New York: Random House.
Jung, C.G. (1964). Flying saucers: A modern myth
of things seen in the skies. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press.
Karen, R. (1998). Becoming
attached—First relationships and how they
shape our capacity to love. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Keen, E. (2000). Chemicals for the
mind—Psychopharmacology and human consciousness. Westport, CT: Praeger.
Kilbourne, J. (1999). Deadly
persuasion—Why women and girls must fight the addictive power of
advertising. New York: The Free Press.
Kirkup, G., Janes, L., Woodward, K. and Hovenden,
F. (Eds.) (2000). The gendered cyborg: A reader. New
York: Routledge.
Kitchin, R. & Blades, M. (2002). The
cognition of geographic space. London: I.B. Tauris.
Kline, N. (2007). The shock
doctrine: The rise of disaster capitalism. New York: Henry Holt.
Kline, W. (2001). Building a better
race: Gender, sexuality, and eugenics from the turn of the century to
the baby boom. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Kraemer, S. & Roberts, J. (Eds.).
(1996). The politics of attachment—Towards a secure society.
London: Free Association Books.
Lakoff, G. (2006). Whose freedom?
The battle over America's most important idea. New York: Farrar,
Straus and Giroux.
Lakoff, G. (1996). Moral
politics—How liberals and conservatives think. Chicago: The
University of Chicago Press.
Lakoff, G. and Johnson, M. (1999).
Philosophy in the flesh—The embodied mind and its challenge to western
thought. New York: Basic Books.
Lakoff, G. and Johnson, M. (1980).
Metaphors we live by. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Langer, E. (1989). Mindfulness.
Cambridge, MA: Perseus Books.
Lasch, C. (1979). The culture of
Narcissism—American life in an age of diminishing expectations. NY:
Norton.
Laszlo, E., Artigiani, R., Combs, A. and Csányi, V.
(1996). Changing visions—Human cognitive maps: past,
present, and future. Westport, CT: Praeger.
Laszlo, E. and Masulli, I. (Eds.). (1993).
The evolution of cognitive maps—New paradigms for the twenty-first
century. The World Futures General Evolution Studies, Vol. 5.
Amsterdam: Gordon and Breach Science Publishers.
LeDoux, J. (1996). The emotional
brain—The mysterious underpinnings of emotional life. New York:
Simon & Schuster.
Letts, C., Ryan, W. and Grossman, A. (1999). High performance nonprofit organizations. New York: John
Wiley & Sons.
Louv, R. (2005). Last child in the
woods—Saving our children from nature deficit disorder. Chapel Hill,
NC: Algonquin Books.
Loye, D. (2000). Darwin's lost
theory of love—A healing vision for the new century. Lincoln, NE:
toExcel.
Maestripieri, D. (Ed.). (2003).
Primate psychology. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Marris, P. (1996). The politics of
uncertainty—Attachment in private and public life. London: Routledge.
Mercer, J., Sarner, L. and Rosa, L. (2003).
Attachment therapy on trial—The torture and death of Candace Newmaker.
Westport, CT: Praeger.
Miller, A. (2005). The body never
lies—The lingering effects of cruel parenting. New York: Norton.
Mills, C. (1959/2000). The
sociological imagination. New York: Oxford University Press.
Mitchell, S. (2000). Relationality—From
attachment to intersubjectivity. Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press.
Naisbitt, J. (1999). Hightech/high
touch: Technology and our accelerated search for meaning. New York:
Nicholas Brealey Publishing.
Niehoff, A. (1999). On being a
conceptual animal. Bonsall, CA: Hominid Press.
Nisbett, R. (2003). The geography of
thought—How Asians and Westerners think differently…and why. New
York: Free Press.
Postman, N. (1993). Technopoly—The surrender
of culture to technology. New York: Vintage Books.
Putnam, R. (2000).
Bowling alone : The collapse and revival of American
community. New York: Simon & Schuster.
Rifkin, J. (2000). The age of
access—The new culture of hypercapitalism where all of life is a
paid-for experience. New York: Putnam.
Schor, J. (2004). Born to buy—The
commercialized child and the new consumer culture. New York:
Scribner.
Shlain, L. (1998). The alphabet
versus the Goddess—The conflict between word and image. New York:
Penguin.
Siegel, D. (1999). The developing
mind—Toward a neurobiology of interpersonal experience. New York:
Guilford Press.
Sommers, C and Satel, S. (2005). One
nation under therapy—How the helping culture is eroding self-reliance.
New York: St. Martin's Press.
Stern, D. (2004). The present
moment—In psychotherapy and everyday life. New York: Norton & Co.
Stiles. P. (2005). Is the American
dream killing you? How “the market” rules our lives. New York:
HarperCollins.
Walter, C. (2006). Thumbs, toes, and
tears—And other traits that make us human. New York: Walker & Co.
Williams, M. (1999). Wittgenstein,
mind and meaning—Towards a social conception of mind. London:
Routledge.
The Foundation has secured permission to make reprints of the
following articles, papers, and presentations available to nonprofit organizations. If you would
like a copy of a particular reprint, please click on the CONTACT button
above and send us the name of the reprint, and the name and address of
your nonprofit agency. Reprints in paper format will be sent to your
mailing address. Reprints in Word, PDF, or PowerPoint formats will be sent to your
email address as an attachment (some PDF or PowerPoint files may be as large as one or
two megabytes). Please do not make or resend additional copies of these
reprints without the permission of the copyright holder.
Anderson, M. (2003). Embodied Cognition: A field guide. Artificial
Intelligence, 149, 91-130. (PDF format, 360K)
Bradshaw, G., Schore, A., Brown, J., Poole, J. & Moss, C. (in press).
Elephant breakdown—Social trauma: early disruption
of attachment can affect the physiology, behaviour and culture of
animals and humans over generations. Nature (PDF Format, 104K)
Corvo, K. (2004). Attachment issues in domestic violence: Toward more
effective models of helping. (PowerPoint slides for a presentation made
in Albuquerque, NM; August 17, 2004, 226K)
Corvo, K. (2004). Violence, separation, and loss in the families of
origin of domestically violent men. (in press) (Word format, 84K)
Corvo, K. and Johnson, P. (2003). The vilification of the
“batterer”: How blame shapes domestic violence
policy and interventions. Aggression and Violent Behavior, 8,
251-289. (Word format,132K)
Costas, G. (1996). Guiding principles in infant
mental health and their implications. (Keynote address to the Annual
Conference of the New Jersey Association for Infant Mental Health,
November 1996) (Word format, 72K)
DiFrisco, M. (2006). Creating a theme line that
works: A nonprofit association case study. (unpublished paper) (Word
format, 48K)
Fonagy, P. (1999). Transgenerational
consistencies of attachment: A new theory. (Paper to the Developmental
and Psychoanalytic Discussion Group, American Psychoanalytic Association
Meeting, Washington DC, May 1999) (Word format, 188K)
Grossman, W. (2002). Holding on: Families search for a miracle
therapy that won't hurt their troubled children unable to form
attachments with other people. Houston Press, September 19-25,
23-33. (Paper format, 8 pages)
Haslam-Hopwood, T. (2004). Psychoeducation approaches to promote
mentalizing. (PowerPoint slides for a presentation made in Houston, TX;
December 11, 2004, 102K)
Heifetz, R., Kania, J, & Kramer, M. (2004). Leading boldly:
Foundations can move past traditional approaches to create social change
through imaginative—and even
controversial—leadership. Stanford Social Innovation Review, 2,
20-30. (PDF format, 696K)
Hutchins, E. (1995) Cognition in
the wild. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. (Excerpt of chapter nine
“Cultural Cognition” copied by permission, paper format, 13 pages)
Leonhardt, F. (2003). A study guide to Pistole's article
“Preventing
Teenage Pregnancy.” (unpublished paper) (Paper format, 39 pages)
Leonhardt, F. (2004). “A New Deal for
emotions”—An essay on marketing attachment theory. (unpublished paper)
(Paper format, 68 pages)
Leonhardt, F. (2004). A summary of the Allan
Schore workshop “Affect Regulation and the Repair of Self” held in Santa Fe, New Mexico, October 29-31, 2004 (Word
format, 112K)
Leonhardt, F. (2004). A summary of the two-day
conference entitled “Mentalization, the state of the art: From basic
science to clinical application” held in Houston, Texas, December 10-11,
2004 (Word format, 100K)
Leonhardt, F. (2005). Attachment as an adaptive
theory of social change. (unpublished paper) (Word format, 124K)
Leonhardt, F. (2005). A summary of the Sir
Richard Bowlby workshop held in Canmore Alberta Canada, October 28 - 29,
2005 (Word format, 116K)
Leonhardt, F. (2006). A summary of the seventh
annual “Bridging the Gap” conference entitled “Clinical Application of
Attachment Theory and Research” held in Salt Lake, Utah, February 8 - 9,
2006 (Word format, 108K)
Leonhardt, F. (2006). A summary of the Louis
Cozolino workshop “The Neuroscience of Human Relationships: Attachment
and the Developing Social Brain” held in Santa Fe, New Mexico, October
27-29, 2006 (Word format, 128K)
Leonhardt, F. (2006). A summary of Robin
Dunbar's book “Grooming, Gossip, and the Evolution of Language”
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press) (Word Format, 124K).
Leonhardt, F. (2006). A summary of Richard
Nisbett's book “The Geography of Thought: How Asians and Westerners
Think Differently...and Why” (New York: Free Press) (Word Format, 116K).
Leonhardt, F. (2006). A summary of George
Lakoff's book “Whose Freedom? The Battle Over America's Most Important
Idea” (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux) (Word Format, 128K).
Leonhardt, F. (2006). A summary of Neil
Postman's book “Technopoly—The Surrender of Culture to Technology” (New
York: Vintage Books) (Word Format, 104K).
Leonhardt, F. (2006). A summary of an edited
volume entitled “The Politics of Attachment—Toward a Secure Society”
(London: Free Association Books) (Word Format, 96K).
Leonhardt, F. (2006). A summary of Peter Marris’
book “The Politics of Uncertainty—Attachment in Private and Public Life”
(London: Routledge) (Word Format, 92K).
Leonhardt, F. (2007). A summary of Daphne de
Marneffe's book “The Maternal Desire—On Children, Love, and the Inner
Life” (New York: Back Bay Books) (Word Format, Part I - 144K; Part II -
132K).
Leonhradt, F. (2007). A Summary of Elaine L.
Graham's book “Representations of the Post/Human—Monsters, Aliens and
Others in Popular Culture” (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers
University Press) (Word Format, 184K).
Leonhardt, F. (2007). A Summary of Ludwig von
Bertalanffy's book “General System Theory: Foundations, Development and
Applications” (New York: Braziller) (Word Format, 228K).
Leonhardt, F. (2007). A Summary of the Afterword
to Christopher Lasch's book “The Culture of Narcissism—American Life in
An Age of Diminishing Expectations” (New York: Norton) (Word Format,
100K).
Leonhardt, F. (2007). A Summary of a Book
Chapter entitled “Toward an Ecology of Culture and Capitalism” from
Jeremy Rifkin's book “The Age of
Access—The New Culture of Hypercapitalism Where All of Life is a
Paid-for Experience (New York: Putnam) (Word Format, 136K).
Leonhardt, F. (2008). Bowlby's two “Buzzkills”:
The Risk of Moving Maternal Desire and Human Bonding from Vitalism to
Scientific Understanding. (unpublished paper) (Word format, 54K)
Leonhardt, F. (2008). A Summary of David
Anderegg's book “Nerds—Who They Are and Why We Need More of Them” (New
York: Penguin) (Word Format, 116K).
Leonhardt, F. (2008). A Summary of a Book
Chapter entitled “The Culture of Narcissism—American Life in An Age of
Diminishing Expectations” from Christopher Lasch's book “The Culture of Narcissism—American Life in
An Age of Diminishing Expectations” (New York: Norton) (Word Format,
100K).
Leonhardt, F. (2008). A Summary of Carl Jung's
book “Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies”
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press) (Word Format, 137K).
Marris, P. (2002). What can be wrong with
growth? In B.S. Baudot (Ed.) Candles in the dark—A new spirit for a
plural world. Seattle: University of Washington Press. (Word format,
87K).
Marvin, R. & Whelan, W. (2003). Disordered
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