Skip to content
  • Datenschutz
  • Impressum
Neue Gesellschaft für Psychologie

Neue Gesellschaft für Psychologie

Gesellschaft für Theorie und Praxis der Sozialwissenschaften

  • Aktuelles
  • Über die NGfP
    • Ziele
    • Mitgliedschaft
    • Kooperationen
    • Satzung
  • Vorstand
  • Kongresse
    • NGfP Kongress 2023
    • NGfP Kongress 2020
    • NGfP Kongress 2019
    • NGfP Kongress 2018
    • NGfP Kongress 2017
    • NGfP Kongress 2016
    • NGfP Kongress 2015
    • Symposium 2014
    • Machtwirkung und Glücksversprechen (2013)
    • NGfP Kongress 2012
      • Call for Papers
      • Klaus-Jürgen Bruder: Massenloyalität
      • Tagungsband: Sozialpsychologie des Kapitalismus im Psychosozial-Verlag
    • NGfP Kongress 2011
    • NGfP Kongress 2008
  • Videos
  • Kontakt
  • Arbeitsgruppen
    • Politische Psychologie und Psychopolitik, post-covid
  • Toggle search form

Ian Parker gibt Stelle an der Manchester Metropolitan University auf

Posted on 4. Februar 201330. September 2024 By Jürgen Günther

Ian Par­ker hat sei­ne Posi­ti­on an der Man­ches­ter Metro­po­li­tan Uni­ver­si­ty auf­ge­ge­ben.
Hier sei­ne Erklä­rung zu den Vor­gän­gen:

IAN PARKER RESIGNATION STATEMENT

pdf ver­si­on

I have resi­gned from Man­ches­ter Metro­po­li­tan Uni­ver­si­ty.

My posi­ti­on the­re now is untenable. I was sus­pen­ded for ques­tio­ning workload arran­ge­ments and appoint­ment pro­ce­du­res. The uni­ver­si­ty then issued mis­lea­ding state­ments to the press imply­ing that the­re were other reasons for the char­ge of ‘gross pro­fes­sio­nal mis­con­duct’. This attack by the uni­ver­si­ty on my rights as an aca­de­mic, on my scho­lar­ly work and on my trade uni­on acti­vi­ties has had las­ting effects, and every attempt to try and repair the dama­ge done has been blo­cked by them. writ­ten evi­dence pre­sen­ted to my disci­pli­na­ry hea­ring by one of my mana­gers included the unwil­lingly tel­ling sen­tence: ‘I deep­ly reg­ret the situa­ti­on and the inex­orable dama­ge incur­red by my Depart­ment and the Uni­ver­si­ty’. I must say I agree! The basis of the cam­paign to sup­port me was that issues of sec­re­cy and con­trol were at the heart of the acti­vi­ties that led to my sus­pen­si­on, and that the docu­ments should be released to make clear what the char­ges were and so clear my name. An archi­ve of mate­ri­al about the case was accu­mu­la­ting throug­hout the cam­paign at www.asylumonline.net.

Key docu­ments

The­re has been a sus­tained attempt to silence me, and sup­pres­si­on of the docu­ments has (as the uni­ver­si­ty well knows) work­ed against me. This is why I am now making the­se docu­ments available so rea­ders can make up their own mind as to whe­ther I was abso­lut­e­ly right every step of the way, whe­ther what I did was sil­ly and rude or whe­ther I com­mit­ted hein­ous cri­mes that should be punis­hed with an attempt to end my aca­de­mic care­er.

On 18 May 2012 during my time as a Uni­ver­si­ty and Col­lege Uni­on (UCU) cam­pus repre­sen­ta­ti­ve I sent a ‘con­fi­den­ti­al’ email to some indi­vi­du­al col­le­agues in my depart­ment about workload for the next aca­de­mic year [www.parkerian.com/120518.rft]. This email was lea­k­ed to the head of depart­ment by one of the reci­pi­ents, and I was cal­led to a mee­ting, befo­re which I sent an open email on 21 May to the depart­ment­al list so that it was clear what I had done [www.parkerian.com/120521.rft]. A war­ning let­ter sent by the head of depart­ment con­sti­tu­tes what MMU refer to in the second of their two char­ges as ‘a reasonable manage­ment ins­truc­tion’ [www.parkerian.com/121003.rft].

On 26 Sept 2012 I sent an email to the head of depart­ment ques­tio­ning secre­ti­ve pro­ce­du­res over a new lec­tu­rer appoint­ment [www.parkerian.com/120926a.rft], and fol­lo­wing their rep­ly, which did not allay my con­cerns and invi­ted me to con­sult Human Resour­ces [www.parkerian.com/120926b.rft], I sent an email to the depart­ment, copied to the head of Human Resour­ces (HR) and the Vice-Chan­cell­or [www.parkerian.com/ 120926c.rft]. It is this email that MMU refers to in the second of the two char­ges as the email ‘inten­ded to under­mi­ne the cre­di­bi­li­ty of a Head of Depart­ment’.

On 2 Oct (at just befo­re 16.00) a disci­pli­na­ry let­ter cal­led me to a mee­ting at 11.00 on 3 Octo­ber [www.parkerian.com/121002.rft]. I said I could not attend this mee­ting becau­se it was too short noti­ce for my uni­on repre­sen­ta­ti­ve to attend with me, and so on 3 Oct I was sus­pen­ded [www.parkerian.com/121003.rft] with imme­dia­te effect. To cut a long sto­ry short, the disci­pli­na­ry hea­ring on 7 Octo­ber resul­ted in a ver­dict that my first email about the appoint­ments in Sep­tem­ber was within the remit of my work as a UCU repre­sen­ta­ti­ve,

but the email copied to the who­le depart­ment (and HR and Vice-Chan­cell­or) was desi­gned to under­mi­ne the head of depart­ment and ther­eby also dis­o­bey­ed the reasonable manage­ment ins­truc­tion not to send such emails. The char­ge was down­gra­ded from ‘gross pro­fes­sio­nal mis­con­duct’ to ‘pro­fes­sio­nal mis­con­duct’ and the penal­ty was that I would be issued with a ‘final writ­ten war­ning’ which would mean that I could be dis­missed instant­ly for any fur­ther per­cei­ved wrong­do­ing. I was also ins­truc­ted to wri­te a let­ter of apo­lo­gy to the head of depart­ment (for sen­ding emails that under­mi­ned her aut­ho­ri­ty). While I was tempt­ed to be stub­born about this, I rea­li­sed acer some dis­cus­sion with fri­ends that the­re were aspects of the emails I could and should apo­lo­gi­se for. So I did wri­te and send that apo­lo­gy [www.parkerian.com/121204.rft]. The way was then clear for me to return to work. I was also clear, howe­ver, that I was not retur­ning to a depart­ment whe­re I had been bul­lied and haras­sed (as I explain below). An appeal date was set for 30 Janu­ary 2013, but by then it beco­me clear that this appeal, like the hea­ring, would not be fair­ly con­duc­ted.

I appea­led on the grounds that, in the words of the MMU disci­pli­na­ry pro­ce­du­re, ‘the penal­ty is dis­pro­por­tio­na­te to the alle­ged disci­pli­na­ry breach’ (an email copied to col­le­agues ques­tio­ning appoint­ment pro­ce­du­res while I was UCU cam­pus repre­sen­ta­ti­ve does not con­sti­tu­te gross mis­con­duct), ‘the disci­pli­na­ry pro­ce­du­re was not cor­rect­ly fol­lo­wed’ (the com­po­si­ti­on and con­duct of the panel was inap­pro­pria­te, it included HR per­son­nel who had alre­a­dy sent disci­pli­na­ry let­ters) and ‘new evi­dence has emer­ged’ (of the Vice-Chancellor’s invol­vement and pre­jud­ge­ment of the out­co­me of the pro­cess, which I will return to below).

Per­so­nal a;ack

I have been per­so­nal­ly atta­cked and my work has been under­mi­ned in the past year. I have been par­ti­cu­lar­ly unlu­cky becau­se I have spo­ken out, but I am not the only one in my depart­ment (or in MMU) to have suf­fe­r­ed from inti­mi­da­ti­on that falls within the scope of the university’s bul­ly­ing and harass­ment poli­cy.

For exam­p­le, a date (21 June 2012) was agreed for my own annu­al Pro­fes­sio­nal Deve­lo­p­ment Review (PDR) with the head of depart­ment, but this was can­cel­led, and repla­ced by a PDR with two mana­gers, head of depart­ment and the dean, on 10 July. At this PDR (whe­re I was told that I had published too much and that I should stop my trade uni­on repre­sen­ta­ti­ve acti­vi­ties on cam­pus) I was set ‘objec­ti­ves’ for the year ahead by the dean. I ack­now­led­ged that the­se were the objec­ti­ves set for me on the PDR form sent acer the mee­ting to the dean, and in August I was cal­led to ano­ther mee­ting with the head of depart­ment and dean about the PDR. I con­sul­ted my uni­on branch offi­cers, and on 12 Sep­tem­ber I emai­led the dean ques­tio­ning the way my PDR was con­duc­ted and asking for alter­na­ti­ve PDR arran­ge­ments. The even­tu­al respon­se to this email from the Pro-Vice- Chan­cell­or was to refer the mat­ter to Human Resour­ces as a disci­pli­na­ry mat­ter. I began pre­pa­ring my grie­van­ce against mana­gers in MMU for bul­ly­ing and harass­ment (even­tual­ly for­mal­ly lodged acer I was sus­pen­ded, and which I had to prepa­re when I had no access to my MMU emails to gather the infor­ma­ti­on I nee­ded to make my case) with a state­ment out­lining my case sub­mit­ted on 3 Novem­ber.

When my sus­pen­si­on was lifted I was ins­truc­ted to return to my depart­ment the next working day. I went to my doc­tor and obtai­ned a medi­cal note for anxie­ty / stress at work. A date for my grie­van­ce was set on the mor­ning I was due to meet again with my doc­tor. By this time it was very clear that the grie­van­ce, to be con­duc­ted by a mem­ber of the MMU

direc­to­ra­te would (as with many other such grie­van­ces taken out in the uni­ver­si­ty) be con­duc­ted as if it were a disci­pli­na­ry hea­ring. I now have to think of my health in the­se into­le­ra­ble cir­cum­s­tances, and this is one reason I have resi­gned.

Pro­fes­sio­nal posi­ti­on

My pro­fes­sio­nal work as an aca­de­mic has been under­mi­ned to the point whe­re the­re is now not­hing left to return to in the psy­cho­lo­gy depart­ment. Not only have my con­di­ti­ons of work chan­ged, but the rese­arch base I hel­ped to build in the last 27 years at MMU has very rapidly been dis­mant­led. I have orga­nis­ed con­fe­ren­ces and rese­arch semi­nars with visi­ting scho­lars, tra­vel­led and made links with uni­ver­si­ties around the world, and work­ed with col­le­agues to wri­te rese­arch mate­ri­al that have hel­ped put MMU on the map as a cent­re for inno­va­ti­ve rese­arch methods and cri­ti­cal work in psy­cho­lo­gy. I have taken pains to ensu­re that this work feeds into tea­ching at post­gra­dua­te and under­gra­dua­te level. Even during my four years from 1996–2000 at Bol­ton Insti­tu­te I car­ri­ed on super­vi­sing PhD stu­dents regis­tered at MMU and co-orga­nis­ed an inter­na­tio­nal con­fe­rence in 1999 at the psy­cho­lo­gy cam­pus.

In the past year obs­ta­cles have been pla­ced in the way of rese­arch visi­tors, I have been pro­hi­bi­ted from tra­ve­ling during term time, and my cour­ses in cri­ti­cal psy­cho­lo­gy and psy­cho­ana­ly­tic rese­arch have been cut. I have been under­mi­ned per­so­nal­ly and pro­fes­sio­nal­ly, and MMU psy­cho­lo­gy is now ori­en­ted to main­stream models and methods, so losing the basis of its distinc­ti­ve repu­ta­ti­on in rela­ti­on to other psy­cho­lo­gy depart­ments in the UK. Cour­ses in disa­bi­li­ty stu­dies and com­mu­ni­ty psy­cho­lo­gy have also been cut. The repu­ta­ti­on of MMU psy­cho­lo­gy for inno­va­ti­ve cri­ti­cal rese­arch has been extin­gu­is­hed. It has been made patent­ly clear to me that the­re is no place for me now in that depart­ment.

My stu­dents

I have attempt­ed to enga­ge with MMU during this dif­fi­cult time, and to appeal to tho­se who might have some remai­ning sym­pa­thy for an aca­de­mic ethos of open inquiry in the uni­ver­si­ty. At the same time as the Natio­nal Stu­dent Sur­vey (NSS) is invo­ked as a reason to rat­chet up workloads of tea­ching staff, the uni­ver­si­ty actual­ly seems to have con­tempt for the stu­dents them­sel­ves. Bey­ond respon­ses to the NSS, the self-acti­vi­ty and ques­tio­ning spi­rit of stu­dents is trea­ted with sus­pi­ci­on or (in the case of the cam­paign to sup­port me) demeaned.

I have endea­vou­red to find a solu­ti­on that would pro­tect the care­ers of my PhD stu­dents. I car­ri­ed on mee­ting with PhD stu­dents and the­re have been some­ti­mes ago­ni­s­ing dis­cus­sions about how we can con­ti­nue with their rese­arch, how I might con­ti­nue to be invol­ved in sup­port­ing it. I have made the case to MMU for me to be trans­fer­red to ano­ther depart­ment, and I have even offe­red to do this on a frac­tion­al con­tract so that I can car­ry on super­vi­sing tho­se stu­dents alre­a­dy regis­tered. The uni­ver­si­ty has made it clear that it will not agree to this reasonable request.

The uni­on

I attempt­ed to rai­se issues about sec­re­cy and con­trol as a cam­pus repre­sen­ta­ti­ve of UCU, but this has pro­ved to be a near impos­si­ble task over the past year. In my emails about

workload I attempt­ed to rai­se the ques­ti­on of incre­asing pres­su­re on staff, first in ‘con­fi­den­ti­al’ emails and then in an email to the who­le depart­ment. I thought the level of fear was such that it was neces­sa­ry to first can­vas opi­ni­on pri­va­te­ly and ther­eby to faci­li­ta­te the accu­mu­la­ti­on of infor­ma­ti­on about workload for open coll­ec­ti­ve dis­cus­sion. I sent the­se emails while I was UCU repre­sen­ta­ti­ve on Gas­kell Cam­pus, and at the disci­pli­na­ry hea­ring argued that this was in the remit of my trade uni­on acti­vi­ties. The disci­pli­na­ry panel agreed that I had the right to rai­se the­se ques­ti­ons, but dis­agreed with the way I had done it.

The­re was an attempt in my PDR on 10 July 2012 to pre­vent me from acting as trade uni­on repre­sen­ta­ti­ve. The UCU branch was one of the few ‘safe’ spaces to dis­cuss mat­ters of workload and inti­mi­da­ti­on (inde­ed an open Gas­kell branch mee­ting on inti­mi­da­ti­on had been arran­ged by me for the end of the week of my sus­pen­si­on). Now I dis­co­ver that the head of depart­ment has arran­ged to trans­fer into the Gas­kell branch of UCU. I fear for the abili­ty of my col­le­agues to orga­ni­se now to defend their con­di­ti­ons of work. It is clear that the­re is liA­le I can do to help them with the rest­ric­tions impo­sed on me.

Insti­tu­tio­nal con­text

I wro­te to the Direc­tor of HR on 10 Decem­ber 2012 to tell them that my work is no lon­ger valued in the Depart­ment of Psy­cho­lo­gy. The­re has been a deli­be­ra­te chan­ge wit­hout dis­cus­sion of my con­di­ti­ons of work and sta­tus in the depart­ment, a break­down of trust, and my com­plaints have been igno­red. I told HR that I belie­ved that the­re would be a resump­ti­on of the bul­ly­ing and harass­ment I drew atten­ti­on to in my grie­van­ce. I reques­ted that I be trans­fer­red to the Edu­ca­ti­on and Social Rese­arch Insti­tu­te (ESRI) on a frac­tion­al con­tract which would cover super­vi­si­on of my exis­ting PhD stu­dents and enable MMU to enter my publi­ca­ti­ons in the 2013 REF (with the Edu­ca­ti­on Unit of Assess­ment, as it was in the last RAE). ESRI indi­ca­ted to me that they would have been agreeable to this if the­re was agree­ment insi­de MMU to trans­fer resour­ces from the Health Facul­ty to Edu­ca­ti­on.

Dis­cus­sion with col­le­agues in other depart­ments has reve­a­led a pat­tern across MMU to the sec­re­cy and con­trol that I drew atten­ti­on to in my emails about workload and appoint­ment pro­ce­du­res, and of vict­mi­sa­ton of tho­se who dare to speak out. The head of depart­ment claims that she is mere­ly imple­men­ting what she calls the ‘chan­ge agen­da’ in MMU, and the pro­blem may be that she is obe­dient­ly and enthu­si­a­sti­cal­ly doing what seni­or manage­ment in the uni­ver­si­ty tells her to do.

When I appea­led to the Depu­ty Vice-Chan­cell­or respon­si­ble for rese­arch for help acer my PDR he refer­red the mat­ter to Human Resour­ces, with the impli­ca­ti­on that even for that I would be sub­ject to disci­pli­na­ry acton for com­plai­ning about the way I had been trea­ted. During the peri­od of my sus­pen­si­on MMU has insi­nu­a­ted in press com­ment that my sus­pen­si­on was for mat­ters more serious than sen­ding emails about workload and appoint­ment pro­ce­du­res. The Vice-Chan­cell­or hims­elf made such comm­ents when a group of stu­dents and visi­ting rese­ar­chers deli­ver­ed the peti­ti­on about my case to him on the mor­ning of my disci­pli­na­ry hea­ring.

Sup­port cam­paign

Had I obey­ed the 2 Octo­ber manage­ment ins­truc­tion not to dis­cuss my sus­pen­si­on with anyo­ne I would have been finis­hed. The UCU branch at MMU has been stead­fast in their

sup­port for me, and their mem­bers have taken initia­ti­ves to pro­tect all our trade uni­on rights that have put them per­so­nal­ly and pro­fes­sio­nal­ly at risk. They gave me good advice when I was at a loss to know what to do, and they accom­pa­nied me through the pro­cess. I admi­re all tho­se acti­vists who spo­ke out and orga­nis­ed, and they will now car­ry on batt­ling against MMU manage­ment from the insi­de. My fri­ends in dif­fe­rent uni­ver­si­ties around the world mobi­li­sed to defend me even when they did not know exact­ly what I had done wrong. They trus­ted that the insi­nua­tions by MMU must be a ploy by the insti­tu­ti­on to under­mi­ne my case, and through their emails of pro­test and the peti­ti­on they con­sis­t­ent­ly cal­led for the uni­ver­si­ty to be open about what it was doing and why.

Acti­vists in the demo­cra­tic psych­ia­try move­ment sup­port­ed me, inclu­ding through kee­ping a page of the Asyl­um web­site open with infor­ma­ti­on about the cam­paign. Com­ra­des in the left in dif­fe­rent orga­ni­sa­ti­ons were a source of poli­ti­cal strength. Col­le­agues in psy­cho­ana­ly­tic orga­niza­ti­ons also came to my aid, and insis­ted on the ethi­cal dimen­si­on of the ques­ti­ons I was asking and my right to ask them. And a group of stu­dents and inter­na­tio­nal visi­tors who sud­den­ly found their aca­de­mic work dis­rupt­ed by what has hap­pen­ed ral­lied around and did many sur­pri­sing and won­derful things to sup­port me and my loved ones. I can’t ima­gi­ne what it would have been like if I had remain­ed silent and iso­la­ted. What I have lear­nt through the cour­se of this cam­paign is that the­re are many who have been atta­cked and defea­ted and ren­de­red invi­si­ble and mise­ra­ble.

The future

The­re are some remai­ning issues.

While my disci­pli­na­ry hea­ring was taking place on the mor­ning of 7 Novem­ber a group of stu­dents and visi­ting inter­na­tio­nal rese­ar­chers deli­ver­ed a peti­ti­on to the Vice-Chan­cell­or in his office pro­test­ing against my sus­pen­si­on and about the secre­ti­ve way that MMU has mana­ged my case. I was asto­nis­hed to learn he told this group that he had ‘never come across any­thing so serious’ and that even acer the out­co­me of the hea­ring ‘not all the facts will be made public’. The impli­ca­ti­ons of this state­ment by the Vice-Chan­cell­or, if it is true, are very worry­ing, for it indi­ca­tes not only that he had pre­jud­ged the case, but that at no point would MMU release full details of the case so my name can be cle­ared (and this is one reason to make the docu­ments available now). I wro­te to the Vice-Chan­cell­or, and the student/researcher group issued an open state­ment (both are at www.asylumonline.net/ian). His respon­se was sim­ply to refer the mat­ter to HR, and I was told that my cor­re­spon­dence with him will be dealt with at my appeal. This is gro­tes­que, and I am still deman­ding a retrac­tion of his comm­ents and an apo­lo­gy.

In the psy­cho­lo­gy depart­ment the­re is much unhap­pi­ness but now no voice of pro­test. In that sen­se the head of depart­ment has suc­cee­ded in imple­men­ting what MMU calls its ‘chan­ge agen­da’. The fic­tion is enforced that ever­yo­ne is a wil­ling accom­pli­ce, but not all of them are. I have been in cont­act with a num­ber of col­le­agues in that depart­ment, and four of them who have dis­agreed with the way I rai­sed the issues about workload and appoint­ment pro­ce­du­res have none­thel­ess indi­ca­ted that they are wil­ling to speak anony­mously to the press.

I have to car­ry on now out­side MMU. I have editing and wri­ting pro­jects and psy­cho­ana­ly­tic work which will keep me busy. I will con­ti­nue to work in the con­text of the Dis­cour­se Unit, and in asso­cia­ti­on with dif­fe­rent aca­de­mic insti­tu­ti­ons around the world. The uni­ver­si­ty was making me sick. It was time to get out.

Ian Par­ker

Aktuelles

Beitrags-Navigation

Previous Post: Journal für Psychologie Call for Papers: Polyamory
Next Post: Ian Parker gibt Position an der Manchester Metropolitan University auf

Corona – Inszenierung einer Krise

  • Der Kongressband
  • Corona – Inszenierung einer Krise
  • Bestellen:
  • Sodenkamp & Lenz

Macht

  • Bestellen:
  • westendverlag

Digitalisierung

  • Bestellen:
  • westendverlag

Krieg nach innen, Krieg nach außen

  • Bestellen:
  • westendverlag

Paralyse der Kritik

  • Bestellen:
  • Psychosozial-Verlag

Gesellschaftliche Spaltungen

  • Bestellen:
  • Psychosozial-Verlag

Migration und Rassismus

  • Migration und Rassismus
  • Bestellen:
  • Psychosozial-Verlag

Neoliberale Identitäten

  • Neoliberale Identitäten
  • Bestellen:
  • Psychosozial-Verlag

Krieg um die Köpfe

  • Der Kongressband
  • Krieg um die Köpfe
  • Bestellen:
  • Psychosozial-Verlag

Machtwirkung und Glücksversprechen

  • Der Kongressband
  • Machtwirkung und Glücksversprechen
  • Bestellen:
  • Psychosozial-Verlag

Sozialpsychologie des Kapitalismus – heute

  • Der Kongressband
  • Bestellen:
  • Psychosozial-Verlag

Macht – Kontrolle – Evidenz

  • Der Kongressband
  • Bestellen:
  • Psychosozial-Verlag

Widersprechen!

  • Der Kongressband
  • Bestellen:
  • Psychosozial-Verlag

Links

  • Journal für Psychoanalyse
  • Open Access

Kategorien

  • Aktuelles (292)
  • Arbeitsgruppen (1)
  • Artikel (4)
  • Bücher (2)
  • Interviews (4)
  • Jour fixe (2)
  • Journal für Psychologie (14)
  • Kongresse (21)
  • News @en (13)
  • NGfP-Stellungnahmen (3)
  • Veranstaltungen Termine (62)
  • Veröffentlichungen (8)
  • Videos (18)

Links

  • Journal für Psychoanalyse
  • Open Access

Suche

Archiv

  • März 2025
  • Februar 2025
  • Januar 2025
  • September 2024
  • Juli 2024
  • Mai 2024
  • August 2023
  • Juli 2023
  • März 2023
  • Februar 2023
  • November 2022
  • September 2022
  • März 2022
  • Februar 2022
  • Dezember 2021
  • Oktober 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • Juli 2021
  • Juni 2021
  • März 2021
  • Februar 2021
  • Januar 2021
  • September 2020
  • Mai 2020
  • April 2020
  • März 2020
  • Februar 2020
  • Januar 2020
  • November 2019
  • Oktober 2019
  • September 2019
  • Juli 2019
  • Juni 2019
  • April 2019
  • März 2019
  • Februar 2019
  • Januar 2019
  • November 2018
  • Juni 2018
  • Mai 2018
  • April 2018
  • März 2018
  • Dezember 2017
  • November 2017
  • Oktober 2017
  • September 2017
  • Juli 2017
  • Juni 2017
  • Mai 2017
  • April 2017
  • Dezember 2016
  • November 2016
  • Oktober 2016
  • September 2016
  • Juli 2016
  • Juni 2016
  • Mai 2016
  • April 2016
  • März 2016
  • Februar 2016
  • Januar 2016
  • Dezember 2015
  • November 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • Juli 2015
  • Mai 2015
  • April 2015
  • Februar 2015
  • Dezember 2014
  • November 2014
  • Oktober 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • Juli 2014
  • Mai 2014
  • April 2014
  • März 2014
  • Januar 2014
  • November 2013
  • Oktober 2013
  • September 2013
  • August 2013
  • Juli 2013
  • Juni 2013
  • April 2013
  • März 2013
  • Februar 2013
  • Dezember 2012
  • November 2012
  • Oktober 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • Juli 2012
  • Juni 2012
  • Mai 2012
  • März 2012
  • Februar 2012
  • Januar 2012
  • Dezember 2011
  • November 2011
  • Oktober 2011
  • September 2011
  • August 2011
  • Juni 2011
  • Mai 2011
  • März 2011
  • Februar 2011
  • Januar 2011
  • Dezember 2010
  • November 2010
  • Oktober 2010
  • September 2010
  • August 2010
  • Juli 2010
  • Juni 2010
  • Mai 2010
  • März 2010
  • Februar 2010
  • Januar 2010
  • Dezember 2009
  • November 2009
  • Oktober 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • Juli 2009
  • Juni 2009
  • Mai 2009
  • April 2009
  • März 2009
  • Februar 2009

Copyright © 2023 Neue Gesellschaft für Psychologie

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs