LevelFile
Ref NoBPS/001/11/03/02/02
TitlePresidents Blogs 2016-2018
Date2016-2018
Extent1 digital folder
Physical Description60 documents
DescriptionPdf's of Blogs written by Presidents and Vice Presidents of the British Psychological Society Peter Kinderman and Nicola Gale
Peter Kinderman
27 April 2016 Making Sure Psychology Punches Its Weight
4 May 2016 Robustness and Replicability of Our Science
11 May 2016 A Celebration on the Terrace of the House of Commons
18 May 2016 Marching for Mental Health Services
25 May 2016 The Importance of Psychological Wellbeing
1 June 2016 Defending NHS Bursaries and Improving Access to Services
8 June 2016 Communicating the Value of Psychology to the Public
15 June 2016 Psychology can explain the wider picture after tragedies
22 June 2016 We must work together to combat hate
30 June 2016 Dinner with the Royal College of Psychiatrists
6 July 2016 After Chilcott: The Psychology of World Changing Decisions
13 July 2016 The Importance of Listening and Talking
20 July 2016 Psychology has a whole new case of political characters to work with
27 July 2016 Our International Colleagues see UK Psychology as World Leading
3 August 2016 Psychologists, protected titles and regulation loopholes
10 August 2016 Professional identity of psychologists needs greater clarity and unity
17 August 2016 Medieval Scholarship and Postmodern Science
24 August 2016 There is no such Thing as Abnormal
31 August 2016 Debt Mental Health and the Young
7 Sep 2016 In Celebration of Diversity and Human Excellence
14 Sep 2016 A New Website and New Money for Research
21 Sep 2016 The Importance of Being At Party Conferences
27 Sep 2016 The Marriage Between Psychological Science and Politics
5 Oct 2016 The Conservative Party Conference
12 Oct 2016 The Breadth of Psychology and of our Society Activity
19 Oct 2016 Human Rights and Critical Ethical Thinking Are at the Heart of Everything We do
26 Oct 2016 The New British Psychological Society Website
16 Nov 2016 Psychologists speaking out in a changed world
23 Nov 2016 When the arts influence policy more effectively than research
30 Nov 2016 Prevention in mental health demands equity and justice
7 Dec 2016 Does current mental health care contravene the Human Rights Act?
14 Dec 2016 Psychology at the movies
21 Dec 2016 Eight months of success in making psychology relevant to citizens and the real world
4 Jan 2017 Don’t curse the darkness, light a candle
18 Jan 2017 Beyond binary thinking: making sense of our place in the world
25 Jan 2017 Name-checks, bullet points… and children
1 Feb 2017 Get involved - stand up and be counted
8 Feb 2017 A scientist practitioner, leader and role model (‘Festschrift’ Professor Mike Wang)

15 Feb 2017 Doing the right thing, doing the wise thing
22 Feb 2017 Meaning, purpose, relationships and rights FREDA principles
1 Mar 2017 Decoding the mind
3 Mar 2017 Rolling out change at the British Psychological Society
15 Mar 2017 Being enthusiastic about psychology in difficult times
27 Mar 2017 Learning from the Swedes
5 Apr 2017 Our Society: We’re getting there!
7 Apr 2017 Our support for UN World Health Day aims
12 Apr 2017 Dancing parakeets, nation states and loyalty to my principles
19 Apr 2017 Running and role models
26 Apr 2017 A psychological manifesto
3 May 2017 Rollercoasters

Nicola Gale
10 May 2017 A European focus for the year ahead
14 June 2017 Psychologically informed policies for our children and young people
12 July 2017 Fulfilling our purpose
23 Aug 2017 Restructuring the society
4 Oct 2017 Of politics and policy
27 Oct 2017 Talking to the policymakers
21 Dec 2017 Pushing for change today and encouraging the psychologists of tomorrow
2 Feb 2018 Taking our discipline and profession into the future
4 Apr 2018 Sharing what we do
17 Apr 2018 Take off for democracy (BPS Structural Review)
21 June 2018 Psychology: a global reach
28 June 2018 Shoulder to shoulder: collaborative working in psychology
29 Aug 2018 Looking back and looking forward
FormatDigital
NotesThe History of Psychology Centre is committed to creating an inclusive environment for all our users. Be aware that our catalogue contains historic terminology relating to mental health which could be considered offensive. The terminology exists within the original record and has been retained to inform users on viewpoints at the time. It in no way reflects the attitudes of the cataloguers or the British Psychological Society.
LanguageEnglish
AccessConditionsRegistered Users by Appointment Only.
AccessStatusOpen
Location21: Digital Repository
RulesDescription compiled in line with the following: ISAD (G) General International Standard Archival Description MAD3 Third Edition 2000
ArchNoteCompiled by Claire Jackson BPS Archivist History of Psychology Centre.
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