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    According to attachment theory and in accordance with ecological views of development such as that of Bronfenbrenner‚ the child develops within a network of influences that impact a child from various levels (Egeland & Carlson‚ 2004). Psychopathology is not caused by disturbed early experience in a linear way; rather it is a developmental construction resulting from the transactional process as the evolving person interacts with the environment (Egeland & Carlson‚ 2004; Sroufe‚ Carlson‚ Levy & Egeland

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    Chapter 1 7-23 Attachment‚ loss and the experience of grief. Attachment Theory founded by John Bowlby (1977) it explains how we as humans obtain affectionate bonds with others and how when they are threatened how we as humans tend to react. He suggests that these attachments come from a need for security and safety. (P7) when it comes to loss of a loved one it then explains how we as humans are very much the same as the animal world in the way that we grieve a loved one. Grief is the term used

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    children seek for a parent embrace when they are upset. Insecure attachment in children relates to Bowlby’s attachment psychological theory. Prior and Glaser (2006) contend that attachment theory focus on the bonds and relationships between people‚ mainly the long-term relationships between children and parents and romantic partners. The first attachment theorist was a British psychologist by the name John Bowlby. Bowlby described attachment as a long-lasting psychological connectedness that exist among

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    The birth of a child begins a life-long process of joint adaptation between the child and his or her caregivers and the larger social environment. Relations and forms of interactions developed during the early stages of life serve as a basis for many interactions later in life and might have life-long effects (Bowlby 1969). Young children do not have the ability to verbally express what they need to their caregivers‚ so children often convey their needs through their behavior. Parents are often unmindful

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    traced back to childhood. His theory of attachment suggests that children are hardwired to develop attachments to other people because it will ensure survival. Attachment behaviour and caregiving behaviour are complementary to each other because they behave in ways that secure an attachment. In a 1951 report‚ Bowlby claimed that children who were deprived of maternal care for prolonged periods of time during early childhood suffered some degree of intellectual‚ social‚ or emotional deficiency later

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    John Bowlby was the first scientist to use the term attachment (Custance‚ 2012)‚ proposing a theory in the 1950’s to try and establish how and why attachment develops. Bowlby wanted to move away from the behaviourist approach that had gone before. Another influential name in the study of attachment was Mary Ainsworth who was member of John Bowlby’s research group in London at that time (Custance‚ 2012). After initial misgivings around Bowlby’s work‚ Ainsworth saw the relevance in mother/child studies

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    argues that the ‘Social Control Theory’‚ demonstrates that people can abuse or hit other members of their family just because they can. However ‘Social Learning Theory’ suggests that violence is a learned response. O’Leary (1988) believed that domestic abuse had a number of factors which could contribute to the occurrence such as a violent upbringing‚ stress‚ a dissatisfying relationship‚ drug or alcohol abuse and violent aspects within their personalities. The ‘Attachment Theory’ perspective is that

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    evaluate Bowlby’s theory of attachment (12 marks) Bowlby was an evolutionary Psychologist who believed that attachment is a part of evolutionary behaviour and focus on an animal’s instinctive and innate capabilities‚ and the functions of their behaviour. They believe this is useful for learning about human instinctive and biological behaviour. Attachment behaviour keeps a young animal or human safe. It is behaviour seen in all species of animal. Many species of animal form rapid attachments to either mother

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    evaluate the learning theory of attachment The learning theory‚ firstly proposed by Dolland Miller (1950) argues that attachment is a form of nurture and so is learnt. Behaviourists came up with the idea that it is learnt either through classical or operant conditioning. The learning theory was introduced by behaviourists who base most of their explanation on the effects of nurturing. They proposed that all behaviour is learned rather than inborn and In terms of attachment‚ through either classical

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    The character I chose is Boss Baby from the movie Boss Baby. The developmental theory that I chose is Bowlby’s and Ainsworth’s Attachment Theory. When the baby starts turning into a normal baby he starts to do things that a normal baby would do. For example‚ he cries when his parents do not give him attention. This illustrates the important aspects of this theory because it focuses on the relationship between the baby and the parents and how the baby cries right away when the parents are not giving

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