WORK
Maternal Care and Mental Health
Bowlby's 1951 monograph for the World Health Organization that documented the global prevalence of maternal deprivation and established child welfare policy that would reshape institutions across the Western world.
Commissioned by the WHO in 1950 to review research on the effects of institutional care on children's mental health, Maternal Care and Mental Health became one of the most influential public health documents of the twentieth century. Bowlby synthesized evidence from dozens of studies across multiple countries showing that children deprived of consistent maternal care in early life showed profound and often irreversible cognitive and emotional impairment. The monograph's policy impact was immediate: child welfare systems, hospital protocols for children, adoption practices, and institutional design were restructured across Europe and North America based on its findings. For the contemporary discussion of AI, the monograph's most enduring insight is its demonstration that what appears to be individual psychological deficit is typically the consequence of systemic failure to provide the relational conditions that development requires.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The WHO commissioned the monograph in the aftermath of World War II, when institutional care had become the default response for large numbers of displaced
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