ALINSKY, S. (1971) Rules for Radicals. New York: Vintage.
2.
American Psychological Association (1973) Ethical Principles in the Conduct of Research with Human Participants. Washington, DC: Author.
3.
ARGYRIS, C. (1970) Intervention Theory and Method. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
4.
ARGYRIS, C. (1958) “Creating effective research relationships in organizations.”Human Organization17: 34-40.
5.
ARGYRIS, C. (1952) “Diagnosing defense against the outsider.”J. of Social Issues8: 24-34.
6.
BERG, D. N. (1980) “Developing clinical field skills: an apprenticeship model,” in C. P. Alderfer and C. L. Cooper (eds.) Advances in Experiential Social Processes, 2. New York: John Wiley.
7.
BERG, D. N. (1977) “Failure at entry,” in P. H. Mirvis and D. N. Berg (eds.) Failures in Organization Development and Change. New York: Wiley-Interscience.
8.
CAPLAN, N. S. (1976) “Social research and national policy: what gets used, by whom, for what purposes, and with what effects.”Int. Social Science J.28: 187-194.
9.
CHIN, R. (1980) “Therapy for the intellect: reeducating learning and theorying styles.” Edited address to Human Relations Center, Center for Applied Social Science, Boston University.
10.
DEVEREUX, J. (1967) From Anxiety to Method in the Behavioral Sciences. Paris: Mouton.
11.
DIENER, E. and R. CRANDALL (1978) Ethics in Social and Behavioral Research. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.
12.
GERGEN, K. J. (1973) “Social psychology as history.”J. of Personality and Social Psychology26: 309-320.
13.
GOULDNER, A. W. (1971) “Sociology today does not need Karl Marx or an Issac Newton; it needs a V. I. Lenin.”Psychology Today (September): 53-58, 96-97.
14.
JOHNSON, K. (1963) “Dimension of judgment of science news stories.”Journalism Q.40: 315-322.
15.
KELMAN, H. C. (1979) “The types of ethical issues that confront different social science methods.” Address to conference on ethical issues in social science research, Kennedy Institute, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.
16.
KELMAN, H. C. (1968) A Time to Speak: On Human Values and Social Research. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
17.
KELMAN, H. C. and D. P. WARWICK (1978) “The ethics of social intervention: goals, means, and consequences,” in G. Bermant, H. C. Kelman, and D. P. Warwick (eds.) The Ethics of Social Intervention. Washington, DC: Hemisphere.
18.
KIRSCHENBAUM, H. (1978) “New goals for moral education.”The Humanist (Nov.-Dec.): 17-19.
19.
KOHLBERG, L. (1964) “Development of moral character and moral ideology,” in M. L. Hoffman and L. W. Hoffman (eds.) Review of Child Development Research, Vol. 1. New York: Russell Sage.
20.
MASLOW, A. H. (1966) The Psychology of Science. New York: Harper & Row.
21.
MAYO, C. (1979) “Recruitment and training of applied social researchers.” Presented at the annual meeting of the Council for Applied Research, Annapolis, Maryland.
22.
MICHAEL, D. N. and P. H. MIRVIS (1977) “Changing, erring and learning,” in P. Mirvis and D. Berg (eds.) Failures in Organization Development and Change. New York: Wiley-Interscience.
23.
MIRVIS, P. H. (1980) “Chronicles of an innovation.” Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
24.
MIRVIS, P. H. and D. N. BERG [eds.] (1977) Failures in Organization Development and Change. New York: Wiley-Interscience.
25.
MIRVIS, P. H. and S. E. SEASHORE (1979) “Being ethical in organizational research.”Amer. Psychologist34: 766-780.
26.
PINKARD, T. P. (1979) “What constitutes an invasion of privacy and confidentiality in social science research?” Address to conference on ethical issues in social science research, Kennedy Institute, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.
27.
POLANYI, M. (1966) The Tacit Dimension. New York: Doubleday.
28.
ROKEACH, M. (1973) The Nature of Human Values. New York: Free Press.
29.
RYAN, M. and S. L. DUNWOODY (1975) “Academic and professional training patterns of science writers.”Journalism Q.52: 239-246, 250.
30.
SCHILLER, H. I. (1962) “Polls are prostitutes for the establishment.”Psychology Today (July): 20-26, 91.
31.
SIEBER, J. (1982a) The Ethics of Social Research: Surveys and Experiments. New York: Springer-Verlag.
32.
SIEBER, J. (1982b) The Ethics of Social Research: Fieldwork, Regulation, and Publication. New York: Springer-Verlag.
33.
SIEBER, J. (1980) “Ethics without models.”Society (Nov.-Dec.): 48-51.
34.
SMITH, M. B. (1980) “Attitudes, values, and selfhood,” in Nebraska Symposium on Motivation. Lincoln: Univ. of Nebraska Press.
35.
STOCKING, H. A. and S. L. DUNWOODY (1982) “Social sciences in the mass media: images and evidence,” in J. Sieber (ed.) The Ethics of Social Research: Fieldwork, Regulation and Publication. New York: Springer-Verlag.
36.
TYMCHUK, A. J. (1981) “Proactive ethical decision-making in social science research and practice.” Presentation at the American Psychological Association annual convention, Los Angeles.
37.
VICKERS, G. (1965) The Art of Judgment. New York: Basic Books.
38.
WALTER, G. A. and C. C. PINDER (1980) “Ethical ascendance or back sliding.”Amer. Psychologist35: 936-937.
39.
WARWICK, D. P. (1979) The Teaching of Ethics in the Social Sciences. Report to the Project on the Teaching of Ethics, Hastings Center, Hudson-on-Hudson, New York.
40.
WARWICK, D. P. and H. C. KELMAN (1973) “Ethical issues in social intervention,” in G. Zaltman (ed.) Processes and Phenomena of Social Change. New York: Wiley-Interscience.
41.
WILLIAMS, W. and J. W. EVANS (1969) “The politics of evaluation: the case of head start.”Annals of the Amer. Academy of Pol. and Social Sci.385: 118-132.