Search for dissertations about: "defensive patterns"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 9 swedish dissertations containing the words defensive patterns.
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1. Compulsory treatment of alcoholics, psychiatric comorbidity, psychological characteristics, coercive experiences and outcome
Abstract : This thesis concerns involuntary treatment of alcoholism. Clients committed according to the Swedish Act on Care of Addicts in Certain Cases were treated in the same residential treatment setting as voluntarily admitted clients. READ MORE
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2. High job demands, low support : Social work praktice realities in public social services in Crete
Abstract : The overall aim of the present thesis is to gain an understanding of the working life of social workers working in public social services in Crete. It is a three-phase study, consisting of three distinct but related research parts; each research part is built upon issues and questions derived from the preceding part. READ MORE
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3. Borderline psychopathology and the defense mechanism test
Abstract : The main purpose of the present studies has been to develop the Defense Mechanism Test (DM1) for clinical assessment of severe psychopathology with the focus on the concept of Borderline Personality Organization (BPO) according to Kemberg. By relating the DMT and the Structural Interview to each other, the concurrent validity of the concept of Personality Organization (PO) for psychiatric inpatients has been investigated. READ MORE
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4. Dynamic enforcement of decentralized security policies
Abstract : This thesis explores defining security policies in a decentralized setting and dynamic methods of enforcing such policies. In a decentralized setting, principals are free to trust or distrust other principals. The key challenge is to provide possibilities for expressing and enforcing expressive decentralized policies. READ MORE
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5. Molecular population genetics of inducible defense genes in Populus tremula
Abstract : Plant-herbivore interactions are among the most common of ecological interactions. It is therefore not surprising that plants have evolved multiple mechanisms to defend themselves, using both constitutive chemical and physical barriers and by induced responses which are only expressed after herbivory has occurred. READ MORE