Association of Business Psychologists

The Association for Business Psychology is the professional representative, deliberative and regulatory institution for business psychologists in the United Kingdom and Ireland. It holds regular conferences, approves university courses in the field, negotiates on behalf of the profession, and makes training and other information available both to members and to others.

History

A keynote speaker addresses the ABP annual conference in May 2008 at the Robinson College Conference Centre, Wyboston, Cambridgeshire UK

The Association was set up in 2000 by members of the Division of Occupational Psychology of the British Psychological Society who felt that the Society was too academic in its approach and insufficiently attuned to the practical and fast-moving needs of their organisational clients.[1] The first chair was Dr Brian Baxter.

The Association was renamed the Association for Business Psychology following a membership vote in December 2013. The current chair is Ben Williams.[2] The Association's purpose is to "champion business psychology."[3]

Definition

Business Psychology is the study and practice of improving working life. It combines an understanding of the science of human behaviour with experience of the world of work to attain effective and sustainable performance for both individuals and organisations.

Business Psychology in Practice

Examples of how business psychology is applied can be found in a collection of case studies, published by Wiley ISBN 978-1-86156-476-4. Further examples are published regularly on the ABP website at http://www.theabp.org.uk/news.aspx.

gollark: Presumably just anything involving multiple processing steps could do that, even.
gollark: That seems like a weird worst-case scenario. I'm pretty sure there are things with more CO2 output than that.
gollark: As planned.
gollark: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Newton%27s_flaming_laser_sword
gollark: Roughly.

References

  1. "Association for Business Psychology". Chair of the Association. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  2. "Association for Business Psychology". ABP Chair. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  3. "Association for Business Psychology". ABP Chair. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
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