Bryan E. Robinson

Bryan E. Robinson
Born 1945
Nationality American
Education Ph.D
Alma mater University of North Carolina
Occupation Writer, Psychotherapist, and Professor Emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Website http://www.bryanrobinsononline.com/

Bryan E. Robinson is an American writer, psychotherapist, and professor emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte currently living in Asheville, NC. He is a graduate of East Carolina University and the University of North Carolina system and author of two novels and over 35 nonfiction books and Professor of Counseling and Child Development at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte for 25 years...[1] At UNC-Charlotte, he conducted the first research studies on children of workaholics and the effects of workaholism on marriage and the family.[2] Robinson is best known for his the book, Chained to the Desk: A Guidebook for Workaholics, Their Partners and Children and the Clinicians Who Treat Them (2014, its third edition).[3] He is noted for his identification of two axes for workaholics: work initiation and work completion.[4] He associates the behavior of procrastination with both "Savoring Workaholics" (those with low work initiation/low work completion) and "Attention-Deficit Workaholics" (those with high work initiation and low work completion), in contrast to "Bulimic" and "Relentless" workaholics - both of whom have high work completion. He is widely recognized as being one of the world's leading experts on workaholism.[5] He is also known for developing the Work Addiction Risk Test (WART) a psychometric tool used to measure work addiction used clinically and in research worldwide to identify workaholism.[6] He has lectured on his pioneering research on workaholism and work/life balance across the United States and throughout the world: Sweden, Russia, Norway, Hong Kong, England, Canada, and Australia, and his books have been translated into thirteen languages: Arabic, Korean, Turkish, Hebrew, German, French, Chinese, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, Polish, Japanese, and Russian.[7]

Work

Robinson's early work included his publications on men in day care, teenage dads, and gay fathers. His interests turned to the field of addiction and recovery. When he realized there was no information on workaholism especially as it related to the family, Robinson and his research team launched a series of studies, the first of their kind, to examine the influence of work addiction on family functioning and to develop an empirical instrument to measure work addiction[8]

Awards

In 1989, during his tenure as Professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Robinson won the First Citizens Scholars Medal given annually to faculty for outstanding scholarship and a distinguished record in research. In 1998 Robinson's research on workaholism and the family was recognized by the American Counseling Association which honored him with the ACA Extended Research Award for conducting high-quality research over an extended period of time in areas of concern and interest to the counseling profession. Among his other honors are several literary awards for his Southern noir debut novel, Limestone Gumption: A Brad Pope and Sisterfriends Mystery: The New Apple Book Medal for psychological suspense, the Silver IPPY Award for outstanding mystery of the year; the USA Regional Excellence Book Award for best fiction in the Southeast; and the Bronze Foreword Review Book Award for best mystery[9]

Bibliography

Nonfiction (Books)

Fiction (Books)

References

  1. Steinem, Gloria (1993). Revolution from within : a book of self-esteem (1st pbk. ed. ed.). Boston: Little, Brown and Co. pp. 89–93. ISBN 0316812471.
  2. Weissmann, Jordan (September 2013). "The Work Addiction". The Atlantic: 19.
  3. Renter, Elizabeth (June 15, 2015). "How Job Stress Might Be Killing You, and What You Can Do About It.". US News and World Report. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  4. Robinson, Bryan E. (1998). Chained to the desk : a guidebook for workaholics, their partners and children, and the clinicians who treat them. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-7480-6.
  5. Wright, Chris. "The Truth About Workaholism". The Fix: Addiction and Recovery, Straight Up. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  6. Beck, Melinda (15 June 2010). "Why Relaxing is Hard Work". The Wall Street Journal.
  7. Robinson, Bryan. "About Bryan Robinson". Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  8. Asa, Richard (18 January 2014). "Addicted to Work, at the Cost of Love". The Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  9. Robinson, Bryan. "Bryan Robinson Novels". Retrieved 9 October 2016.
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