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Interpersonal Relationships

By: Series: Foundations of PsychologyPublication details: London: Routledge, 2014Description: 186ISBN:
  • 9780415429160
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 302 JAC
Summary: With a more specific focus than the all-encompassing textbook, each title in the Foundations of Psychology series enables students who are new to psychology to get to grips with a key area of psychological research, while also developing an understanding of basic concepts, debates, and research methodologies. In this book Diana Jackson-Dwyer presents an introductory survey of classic and recent research on relationships and the theories that underpin them. The book starts with a brief overview of the place of relationships within the history of psychology and of their evolutionary roots: our need to belong, to attach and to affiliate. After a look at methodology, it considers different types of relationships: kinship, friendship, loving and mating. Theories are advanced to explain the formation, maintenance and breakdown of relationships. The book draws on a wide array of contemporary research, and covers issues ranging from rising divorce rates to cultural variations in mating patterns, the issue of gay marriage, and the effect of the internet on relationships.
List(s) this item appears in: New Arrivals September 2025 - Law
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Alliance School of Law BA/BBA.LLB 302 JAC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 3 Available L11094
Book Book Alliance School of Law BA/BBA.LLB 302 JAC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 4 Available L11095
Reference Book Reference Book Alliance School of Law BA/BBA.LLB 302 JAC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan L11092
Book Book Alliance School of Law BA/BBA.LLB 302 JAC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 2 Available L11093
Total holds: 0

With a more specific focus than the all-encompassing textbook, each title in the Foundations of Psychology series enables students who are new to psychology to get to grips with a key area of psychological research, while also developing an understanding of basic concepts, debates, and research methodologies. In this book Diana Jackson-Dwyer presents an introductory survey of classic and recent research on relationships and the theories that underpin them.

The book starts with a brief overview of the place of relationships within the history of psychology and of their evolutionary roots: our need to belong, to attach and to affiliate. After a look at methodology, it considers different types of relationships: kinship, friendship, loving and mating. Theories are advanced to explain the formation, maintenance and breakdown of relationships. The book draws on a wide array of contemporary research, and covers issues ranging from rising divorce rates to cultural variations in mating patterns, the issue of gay marriage, and the effect of the internet on relationships.

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