Author:
SROUFE L. ALAN,CARLSON ELIZABETH A.,LEVY ALISSA K.,EGELAND BYRON
Abstract
Bowlby's attachment theory is a theory of psychopathology as well as a theory
of normal development. It contains clear and specific propositions regarding the role of early
experience in developmental psychopathology, the importance of ongoing context, and the nature
of the developmental process underlying pathology. In particular, Bowlby argued that adaptation
is always the joint product of developmental history and current circumstances (never either
alone). Early experience does not cause later pathology in a linear way; yet, it has special
significance due to the complex, systemic, transactional nature of development. Prior history is
part of current context, playing a role in selection, engagement, and interpretation of subsequent
experience and in the use of available environmental supports. Finally, except in very extreme
cases, early anxious attachment is not viewed as psychopathology itself or as a direct cause of
psychopathology but as an initiator of pathways probabilistically associated with later
pathology.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
439 articles.
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