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American Board of Professional Psychology; American Group Psychotherapy Association; American Mental Health Foundation; American Polygraph Association; American Psychoanalytic Association; American Psychological Foundation; American Psychology–Law Society; American Psychopathological Association; American Synesthesia Association; Anxiety and ...
Harlem Family Institute (HFI) was founded in New York City in 1991 with the goal of providing psychoanalytic training for candidates from diverse backgrounds, and long-term psychotherapeutic and emotional-support for struggling and at-risk youth and their parents in New York's schools in underserved neighborhoods. [18]
The American Psychologist is the association's flagship, peer-reviewed journal. APA also publishes over 70 other journals encompassing most specialty areas in the field; APA's Educational Publishing Foundation (EPF) is an imprint for publishing on behalf of other organizations. [15] Its journals include: [16] Archives of Scientific Psychology
In the 1980s, members of the American Psychological Association joined in a successful lawsuit against APsA, challenging these policies. In 1989, APsA, along with the International Psychoanalytical Association and the New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute, agreed to admit non-physicians for training on the same basis as physicians. [7]
American education-related professional associations (3 C, 29 P) American engineering organizations (3 C, 41 P) Engineering societies based in the United States (16 C, 62 P)
Divisions of the American Psychological Association (9 P) Pages in category "Psychology-related professional associations" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total.
The Eastern Psychological Association was founded on April 27, 1896 as the Section of Anthropology, Psychology, and Philosophy of the New York Academy of Science. [3] In 1903, it was renamed as the "New York Branch" of the American Psychological Association (APA), with this name reaffirmed in 1930. It was renamed again to the "Eastern Branch ...
It is located in the Clara Thompson building of the Upper West Side of New York, New York. It was founded as a protest against the mainstream of American psychoanalytic thought, which was thought to be sterile, dogmatic, and constrictive by the psychoanalysts who founded the institute.