REFERENCES
- See John G. Adair (1973), The Human Subject: The Social Psychology of the Psychological Experiement, Boston: Little, Brown and Company.
- See E.J. Webb, et al., (1966), Unobtrusive Measures: Non-Reactive Research in the Social Sciences, Chicago: Rand McNally.
- A.F. Westin (1967), Privacy and Freedom, New York: Atheneum.
- See Derek Phillips (1973), Abandoning Method, San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
- See M. Nicolaus (1969), ‘Remarks at ASA Convention’, American Sociologist, 4, 154–6.
- Phillips (1973) pp 3–4.
- See M.F.D. Young (Editor), (1971) Knowledge and Control, London: Collier Macmillan.
- T.S. Kuhn (1962), The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Basil Bernstein (1971), ‘Sociology and the Sociology of Education: Some Aspects,’ in Open University E.282, Unit 18, p. 108.
- John O'Neil (1974) (Editor, Phenomenology, Language and Sociology, S Selected Essays of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, London: Heinemann, vi.
- H.F. Ellenberger (1958), ‘A Clinical Introduction to Psychiatric Phenomenology and Existential Analysis,’ in Rollo May et al, (Ed), Existence: A New Dimension in Psychiatry and Psychology, New York: Basic Books, 116.
- Charles A. Reich (1970), The Greening of America, New York: Bantam, pp 286–321.
- S.H. Foulkes and E.J. Anthony (1965), Group Psychotherapy, (Second Edition) Harmondsworth: Penguin, 147.