Open Directory - Science: Social Sciences: Psychology: Alternative: Ecopsychology
See also: - An organization that promotes environmental awareness and social change through the arts and ecopsychological principles. - Participants in this 4-day workshop will explore a new paradigm for an ancient art, experience a deep connection to nature's spirits, and evoke the creativity and healing of the shaman. - The Ecopsychology Institute was established at California State University, Hayward in April 1994 to facilitate an international dialogue between two communities: environmental scientists/activists on the one hand, and psychologists/psychotherapists on the other. - An article on the investigation of green behavior by Catherine Honora Kineavy. - Nature-Connected Psychology Online: Ph.D or M.S. degrees include your prior experiences: inexpensive, accredited. Transferable courses and internships improve careers, global consciousness and human-environmental relationships. - Applied ecopsychology and integrated ecology distant learning. B.S., M.S., Ph.D and Post Doctoral information. - An informal, international, interdisciplinary virtual community devoted to reflecting on the questions which arise from an ecopsychological viewpoint. - Academic research journal directed toward individuals who have an interest in the study of interrelationships between people and their sociophysical surroundings. - Contains five related articles on the website of Dennis Merritt, Jungian analyst, in the ecopsychology section. - Offers information on courses, training books, and degree programs. - A summary for this book, which offers an original introduction to ecopsychology - an emerging field that ties the human mind to the natural world. - Depth-psychological perspectives on listening to the ignored voice of place. - An ecological model that integrates modern psychology with the great spiritual and mythological traditions. - The threads which join the five authors this site focuses on include their various efforts to create a new perspective on our human experience as a Wholeness. Essays by George Kelly, Ronnie Laing, Gregory Bateson, Ernst von Glasersfeld, and Humberto Maturana.