The journal's roots can be traced to Zeitschrift für Individualpsychologie founded by
Alfred Adler in 1914 (Germany).[8][9] Publication was interrupted by the first world war, and resumed in 1923 under the name Internationale Zeitschrift für Individualpsychologie.[10]
Adler immigrated to America in 1935 and established the International Journal of Individual Psychology, published in Chicago.[11][12] After Adler's death in 1937, the journal was edited by his daughter,
Alexandra Adler,[13] and then by
Rudolf Dreikurs.[9]Individual Psychology News was published in 1940 renaming itself Individual Psychology Bulletin from 1941 to 1951.[14] When the American Society of Adlerian Psychology was incorporated in 1952, it took over the publication under the title American Journal of Individual Psychology (1952 to 1956).[15][16]
In 1957,
Heinz Ansbacher took over as editor and it was renamed Journal of Individual Psychology.[17][18] The new, broader editorial policy and focus was announced, calling for papers related to a "holitistic, teleological, phenemological, and socially-oriented approach, based on the assumptions of an active creative self, an open dynamic system of motivation, and an innate potential for social living."[19] The first issue included an article by
Albert Ellis among others, and a paper written by Alfred Adler in 1937, the year of his death.[19] This title, Journal of Individual Psychology was used from 1957 to 1973.[20] The journal was noted for maintaining high academic standards covering topics such as the teleological approach to personality and in the tradition of Adler's socially oriented approach psychology.[17] In 1982, The Journal of Individual Psychology merged with Individual Psychologist and was published under new name and format, Individual Psychology: The Journal of Adlerian Theory, Research & Practice.[21][22] In 1998, it was renamed back to Journal of Individual Psychology.[23]
The Journal of Individual Psychology (1974–1981), Journal of Individual Psychology, and Individual Psychology: The Journal of Adlerian Theory, Research & Practice (1982–1997) is
abstracted and indexed by the
EBSCO Psychology & Behavioral Sciences Collection[28] and
PsycINFO (from 1950).[29]
^Adler, Alfred; Adler, Alexandra (1935). "International journal of individual psychology". International Journal of Individual Psychology.
OCLC1640276.
^
ab"Changes in Journal of Individual Psychology". The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 125 (3): 500. 1957.
doi:
10.1097/00005053-195707000-00036.
Manaster, Guy (2012). "Adler, Alfred (1870-1937)". In Seel, Norbert M. (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Sciences of Learning. Springer. pp. 130–133.
ISBN9781441914279.