Organizational History of ACBS
Organizational History of ACBS
ACBS emerged out of the growing interest in ACT and RFT, especially in the form of the list serves (which began in 2003), the World Conference in Sweden in 2003, the ACT Summer Institutes in Reno (2004), and Philadelphia (2005). We began to realize that we were becoming a defacto organization with what essentially were members and meetings, and we realized that a formal organization was needed to deal with the financial and organizational realities of this activity. The actual spark that led to the list serves and the first World Conference were the events of September 11, 2001. Steve Hayes tells that story here.
In August 2005 a planning committee was formed to guide the establishment of the association. The primary duties of the committee were to construct and approve the bylaws, decide upon the official name of the association, and determine the policies and procedures of this website. Members of the committee were:
- Dermot Barnes-Holmes, National University of Ireland, Maynooth (Ireland)
- Yvonne Barnes-Holmes, National University of Ireland, Maynooth (Ireland)
- Sonja V. Batten, VA Maryland Health Care System and University of Maryland School of Medicine (US)
- Anthony Biglan, Oregon Research Institute (US)
- Frank W. Bond, Goldsmiths College, University of London (UK)
- Joseph Ciarrochi, University of Wollongong (Australia)
- JoAnne Dahl, University of Uppsala (Sweden)
- Eric J. Fox, Western Michigan University (US)
- Steven C. Hayes, University of Nevada (US)
- Carmen Luciano, University of Almeria (Spain)
- Ian Stewart, National University of Ireland, Galway (Ireland)
- Kirk Strosahl, Mountainview Consulting Group (US)
- Niklas Törneke, psychiatrist in private practice (Sweden)
- Robyn D. Walser, National Center for PTSD, VA Palo Alto Health Care System (US)
- Kelly G. Wilson, University of Mississippi (US)
The by-laws and name were repeatedly shared with the ACT and RFT list serves and then formally approved by the planning committee. Finally, membership was opened up in October 2005. In April of 2006 an election was held, leading to the first ABCS Board, which will hold in inaugural meeting at the Second World Conference in London in July 2006.
Visit the Board of Directors page to follow the organizational structure of the board from 2006 to present.
ACBS is turning 10 years old!
ACBS is turning 10 years old!October 16th marks the 10th birthday of ACBS and we have our party pants on and are ready to celebrate.
Use #ACBS10 on social media to join in the fun!
ACBS Birthday Videos
ACBS Birthday Videos
We love hearing from all of you! Send in your birthday videos to Courtney at Staff@contextualcience.org
#ACBS10 Birthday wishes from our New Harbinger friends
Birthday wishes from the ACBS Staff
#ACBS10 Birthday wishes from Robyn Walser's Workshop in Buenos Aires, Argentina
A message from the UCD CBS Lab
Martin Ivancic sends birthday wishes to ACBS
#ACBS10 with David Gillanders
Thank you ACBS from Joanna Dudek
Warm birthday greetings from ACBS BeNe
Ontario ACBS sends birthday wishes #ACBS10
#ACBS10 birthday love from Ryan O'Donnell with Institute of Meaningful Instruction
Birthday Messages
Birthday MessagesThank you to everyone who has sent in a message! Send in your birthday messages to Courtney at Staff@contextualcience.org
Happy 10th Birthday ACBS!
It is my pleasure to congratulate ACBS at this milestone.
ACBS is a multifaceted organization like no other. With a global membership that serves diverse contingencies, impressive progress is being made on both applied and basic fronts.
ACBS has challenged me professionally, intellectually, scientifically, and personally. ACBS has introduced me to many dear friends. And ACBS is an organization I proudly introduce to my students.
In the past 10 years it is breathtaking to think of how ACBS and its members have grown. Wow - time flies when we are having fun, working hard, and making a difference.
To many more!
Andrew
Andrew Gloster, Ph.D.
To celebrate ACBS 10th birthday let me share that with you all.
I almost stumbled on ACT about three years ago because I was desperately searching ("Susan" and) for something helpful to treat anxiety in a very difficult patient I was struggling with.
I had bought two books: the one about ACT and the other about something else. Those days I had a bad flu which left me quite weak and the "about something else"-book was a big hardcover monster of a thing: it looked like it was able to answer all the questions I had but unfortunately it was also very heavy to carry around. For that reason I decided starting reading the ACT book, which seemed to be... well... lighter... In hindsight it was really the most casual and fruitful decision I took in years!
Happy Birthday ACBS: you really changed the way I work, the way I encounter my patients and somehow the person I am!!
Yours
Alida Di Gangi
P.S.
The lesson is clear: Wait to decide which book you are going to read until you have a flu... :-))))
Hello!
A couple of years ago, I was at this Brazilian Conference, when a former student complained that all she wanted to hear was someone talking about their failures. She said: "Everybody comes here just to tell the good stories. My cases don't fit there". This year, just after World Con in Berlin, I called her to say: "Hey, I think I've found the place you're looking for".
The most amazing thing about ACBS for me is how it brings together so many brave, honest, human and generous people.
I'm so proud to be part of this beautiful community!
Happy birthday! I wish you many, many decades of life!
Mônica Valentim
Happy one-decade birthday, ACBS! Thank you so much for the scholarship to attended the ACBS conference in Berlin this year. It is the first conference that I felt so belonged and at home! I benefited professionally and had so much fun at the same time. May you continue to grow contextually to benefits the society!
Love from,
Sook Huey, Malaysia
Hi everyone,
Ten years ago, I had sold my rock climbing guide service in CO and made the pilgrimage to Kalamazoo, MI to take core BA undergrad courses and work as a research assistant in a few well known labs before applying to grad schools in behavior analysis.
There was just one problem. Apparently, when they mapped out MI, they forgot to add mountains. Even short, steep cliffs were drawn out of the picture. I needed to do something with my free time, and since climbing wasn't an option, I read everything I could get my hands on. Making sense of spirituality was among the most mountainous things I'd ever read. In many ways, it still is.
Eric Fox was a newly minted professor, and my stats instructor. Eric said, "I became a PhD. because I liked the idea of people calling me Doc Fox." We hung out a bit, and Eric told me about ACBS and the move from ABAI. I told him that this reminded me of the formation of ABA when it left APA. Eric told me that if things continue in this manner, there would be a journal too, much like JEAB had been the antidote to editorial bias against behavior analysis in the APA journals.
I'd been to ABA a few times by that point. I'd seen the Follies. Best skit ever: the year Steve and Linda Hayes divorced, they put on a Follies skit. I'd been reading their work. They were both at the apex of their careers. And then comes a divorce. So what do they do? They put on a Follies skit about getting their divorce and what people are likely to be saying about it behind their backs. It was brilliant. After that, no one talked. There was just nothing to say that wasn't already out there.
These guys were my heroes. I wanted what they had. They still are my heroes. But now I have what I want: a life of rich, deep meaning and complexity.
Thank you, Steve, Linda, Eric, and ACBS.
Happy birthday!!!!!!!
t.
Thomas G. Szabo, PhD.
Happy Birthday to ACBS,
I joined just over a year ago and since then feel like I have engaged in almost daily professional development that has directly impacted my practice. I frequently take the ideas that people post and thread them through my work. The ACBS community has significantly contributed to the framework I use in my work, both in depth and breadth.
Wishing ACBS a very happy 10th year birthday and thank you to those who gave birth to the organisation, and to those who take the time to share their knowledge and experience.
Many thanks,
Tresna
Tresna Hunt, Ph.D.
Birthday Pictures
Birthday PicturesWe've loved looking at all of your ACBS pictures! Keep sending in your birthday pictures to Courtney at Staff@contextualcience.org
Thank you to Eric Fox for the birthday wish!
The ACBS website 10 years ago
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Messages from the ACBS Office
Messages from the ACBS OfficeMessages from the ACBS Office
On our 10th birthday...
Thank you. Thank you to our Boards, thank you to our members, thank you to our staff.
I've learned so much over the last ten years and have been so grateful to make this journey with all of you. We started out as an idea, and have become a large, diverse, questioning, energetic, and passionate organization that I am proud to be a part of.
When anyone asks me "what do you do for a living?" I get to say that "I get to work with great people and get to affect real change and help others." Not everyone can say that, but I'm thrilled that I can.
ACBS is a community effort and there are so many people responsible for our successes, but I would like to give a special thanks to our graduate student staff and office staff over the years that we have been lucky to have.
Jennifer Plumb Vilardaga
John Dehlin
Douglas Long
Kate Morrison
Brandon Sanford
(current staff:)
Ben Pierce
Fred Chin
Ashley Zebell
Courtney Zirkle
And I'd also like to thank my husband, N. Joe Rodrigues who has been "nearly" staff over the years through all of his help and support.
Here's to 10 more!
Emily Rodrigues
Executive Director (Trouble Maker in Chief)
It’s been a pleasure to get to know our members and become a part of the ACBS community the past three years on staff at ACBS. I’m proud to serve our members who truly care about helping others live a life according to their values. Thank you to the ACBS community for the past 10 years of growth, learning, and laughter.
Happy Birthday ACBS!
Ashley Zebell
Administrative Assistant (The Skipper of Smooth Sailing)
Happy Birthday ACBS!
I joined the ACBS team almost one year ago, and have spent the past 350+ days marveling at what a wonderful community I get to work with. The work the ACBS members are doing, well as the values they promote are truly awe-inspiring. This year has provided me with meaningful and fulfilling work, and for that I am very grateful.
Thank you to the community of members for your patience and kindness. It is a privilege to work here, and I cannot wait for the next birthday!
Courtney Zirkle
Administrative and Social Media Assistant (Ambassador of Buzz)
About the ACBS logo
About the ACBS logoHow did we get to our current logo?
When the first ACBS website was created, Eric Fox created the logo below in 2005/2006.
Prior to the existence of ACBS, Eric had created the acceptanceandcommitmenttherapy.com and relationalframetheory.com websites.
ACBS sincerely thanks Eric Fox for starting off our web presence. We don't know where we would be today without his significant efforts.
Between 2008-2010 we redesigned the website a bit, and created a new logo. Lacking funds, I (Emily Rodrigues) stayed up late one night creating this less than brilliant logo. (Design is not in my skillset unfortunately. Sorry everyone.)
In 2010-2011 the ACBS website underwent a major renovation. With the new site unveiling in 2011, a new logo was commissioned for it.
We used a 3rd party design contest website to create our 2011 logo (which is still our logo as of 2019). This was the description we gave of what we wanted:
We want something a bit more modern, but still professional. (many company logos in our field look old and boring, we don't want that)
We need for this logo to not be trendy (in 10 years we still need to like it).
95% of the time this logo will appear in full color, but we don't want it to look horrible when in black & white.
We're flexible on colors as we're in the middle of a complete website redesign, but we think we want more than one color in our logo. We're currently looking at something like FF8F00, 5A8F29, 3C7DC4 or CD6607, 528413, 2088152, although we don't LOVE any of those yet. Those are just some ideas.
The design part of the logo only needs to include "ACBS" not the full name.
We do not want any typical themes. No images of the head or brain, no using the greek symbol for psychology. Nothing that looks like gears.
The only good symbology we can think of is something to do with "interconnectedness", but that's not required.
Our audience is primarily Ph.D. and master's level folks. We do a "new" and "different" kind of psychology (but still based on good science) so we can be a little more modern with our logo.
Don't go off of our current logo... it is lame... I designed it. :)
Staff and a few former and current Board members took a look at our options and selected our logo. We had a wide variety of options including logos with animals in it, etc.
I can only speak from my own experience in the process, but I didn't want a logo that reminded me of another company I knew, and I didn't want something busy. When looking at the logo I liked the idea of the six parts (like the hexaflex), and the 3 major ones (at the time, it made me think of ACT, RFT, and CBS... even though CBS is much more than that, it clicked with me at the time). This logo was not chosen for any of those reasons, but those are thoughts that occurred to me, and made me like the logo a bit more. Those were my relational frames. :) - Emily Rodrigues, ACBS
About the Name
About the Name
Why does the association name speak only of science, not practice?
In most traditional forms of behavioral science, practice is an after thought, of no fundamental importance to the integrity and truth of a scientific analysis. The hope and trust of the traditional approach, born of its assumptions, is that if we understand things, we may be able to do something useful with that understanding. If we cannot, that is unfortunate, but it does not indicate that there is anything wrong with our analysis.
A functional contextual approach is quite different. We do not see science simply as an analytic tool that touches on application only as a method of evaluating applied technologies, and we do not see application merely as a hoped for extension of our scientific knowledge. Our foundational assumption is our goal: prediction and influence with precision, scope, and depth. If that goal is not reached, there is something wrong with the analysis itself. Thus, for us, application is at the very core of science itself, no matter how basic, because doing something useful with scientific ways of speaking tests the ultimate adequacy of our understanding.
When an educator is guided by RFT principles and a child is taught, those principles are tested. When a clinician applies ACT techniques and principles and a client is helped, those techniques and principles are tested. Without careful, controlled comparisons that can be shared with others, these moments are not fully adequate tests scientifically, but they are tests. That is why there is no fundamental division in our approach between such disparate work as basic RFT studies on the nature of language and cognition, and effectiveness studies on the impact of ACT training. We assume that if a scientific principle or theory is "true" it is useful, and useful in a way that is precise, broadly applicable, and coherent across levels of analysis.
The name of our society speaks simply of science and not practice because our whole purpose is to seek a new kind of science – one in which that division no longer applies. In a functional contextual approach, good science is practice, and good practice is science.
The History of ACBS -- Love from Hate; Knowledge from Ignorance; Community from Division
The History of ACBS -- Love from Hate; Knowledge from Ignorance; Community from DivisionACBS is grounded in ACT, RFT, and the third wave of course. An early witness to that history, Rob Zettle, has written about it (see attached article).
But the actual spark that gave rise to ACBS was more specific and more emotional: the horrifying events of September 11, 2001. It think that matters that ACBS came in part from that event -- and it makes more sense of why ACBS has the motto that is does (which I will quote at the end of this short piece).
The ACBS "Story of Origin" goes something like this (by the way, while I have vetted the details with those involved, if you know of errors let me know).
I was set to go do two workshops in Sweden (one in Stockholm and one in Uppsala) organized by Ned Carter and Kennth Nillsson, suitcase in hand, when I got a call saying to put down my suitcase on turn on the TV. I did and watched in horror as humans jumped from the twin towers like dust falling from a shaken tree, which then fell to the ground.
All airlines were grounded. There would be no workshop in Sweden.
The next week I told my lab "we are going to study prejudice, bias, and stigma." I told them to watch what was about to happen: we in the West will objectify and dehumanize others out of fear. I remember saying "there are not enough bullets and enough bombs and enough soldiers to make ourselves safe in the world that is upon us. Soldiers and politicians are not enough. Behavioral scientists have to be part of the solution." The whole lab was crying. We wanted to do something.
My lab did alter its focus, beginning basic and applied work on acceptance, mindfulness, perspective-taking and values as antidotes to prejudice and stigma. That work in ACT and RFT continues world wide to this day.
In early 2002 Ned, Kenneth and I started to talk about what to do about the cancelled workshop. I wanted to up the ante in response to the horrifying way that workshop was cancelled. I'm not sure if Ned or I said it first but in a call with him we began to talk about not just a workshop but a world wide event on ACT, RFT, and the new behavioral psychology. I suspect it was Ned who raised the idea of a conference, because I found out later that Ned had talked to the Wisung's (who you will meet below) in November 2001 about building behavior analysis in Sweden (which Ned was trying to do through his fledging "Swedish Association for Behavior Analysis" and the Wisung's were trying to do with their private practice). I likely added the expansive vision behind a World Conference for ACT / RFT / Functional Contextualism because it was linked to the horror that starting this process. That call on September 11, 2001 was part of the energy that led to the conference. It was not that we felt we had an answer -- it was that we felt we have to care about developing one and that behavioral psychology in a new form could be part of that. We would meet hate with love; ignorance with knowledge; division with community.
Parenthetically I would not find out until ten years later that Kennth Nillsson had lost $20,000 when the hotel in Stockholm refused to cancel the contract despite the travel lock down. Had I known that I doubt if the replacement would have taken until 2003 ... and knowing about it makes what happened in 2003 all the more remarkable as you will see.
As the idea began to form it spread out to organizational activities in other areas. The grand vision of a conference all about ACT and RFT caused a shift in thinking, not just in me but in many others close to the work. As we began to think of all the things that could go into such a conference we began to see that our work on philosophy, basic science, applied science, and psychotherapy had laid the foundations for something that did not exist.
This conference would take money and organization. My own company, Context Press, put in a little; the Swedish Association for Behavior Analysis, and the Swedish Association for Behavior Therapy co-sponsored it (thanks to Ned and Kenneth). They lent some organizational help but we needed funds. That is why Ned and Ken approached Håkan Wisung and Olle Wadstrom in 2002. They owned "Psychology Partners" (PP) a small practice firm with big visions for behavioral psychology in Sweden. PP tentatively agreed to bankroll it. PP leaders Gisela Wisung, Thomas Gustavsson and Johan Holmberg bpought in. Other staff there at the time -- Alberto Santi, Fredrik Gunnarsson, Magnus Stalby, Hanna Stalby Olofsdotter, Cecilia Gustavsson, Sara Hillbom, and Marielle Ryberg -- were supportive.
We met in a group at the Association for Behavior Analysis meeting in Toronto in May 2002. The attendees were me, Kelly Wilson, Dermot Barnes-Holmes, Yvonne Barnes-Holmes, JoAnne Dahl, Ned Carter, Kirk Strosahl, Jason Luoma, Olle Wadström, and Håkan Wisung. We set a date and a location: Linkoping, Sweden. We decided to do the unimaginable: to try to organize 4 tracks for three days! Wow!
I started the ACT list serve in January 2003 and the RFT list 2 months later. We were deep into the run up to the first World Conference by then (we did not then know there would be a second). I think the list serves were designed in part to make the World Conference possible -- but they also happened because there had been a shift in our thinking.
In hindsight the leap by Ole and Hakan was pretty bold. They had in effect risked the financial health of Psychology Partners. That is why ACBS gave PP an award at the 10th World Conference.
Just a month before – it looked like it might fail. Registrations were way, way behind. It would lose gobs and gobs of money -- far beyond what Kenneth had lost just 2 years earlier because multiple honoraria had been promised; plane tickets had been paid for. It was do or die. For PP perhaps literally.
But it did not fail. The list serves fed the fever. People traveled. The Swedish professionals and students showed up. By the hundreds they came.
The opening event was a plenary on "The Third Wave: What is It and What, if Anything, Unites It?" Kelly Wilson chaired it. It had an all star list of panelists, Thomas D. Borkovec, Steven C. Hayes, Anna Kaver, Robert Kohlenberg, and Mark Williams. Looking at the panel and room packed with hundreds of registrants Kennth Nillsson proudly stood up and loudly proclaimed "This is as close as psychology gets to Rock & Roll." We all laughed ... but the emotion of the moment had something to do with how this happened. We did not yet know there would be an ACBS. It took a while to see that step. But we did know we were a community. There was an "us."
Out of the crucible of 9/11 had been forged a new form of behavioral psychology dedicated to "creating a psychology more worthy of the challenge of the human condition."
- Steve Hayes