International General Medical Society for Psychotherapy was a society founded in 1926. The German physicians Gustav Richard Heyer and Carl Haberlin were among the organization's founders. The prefix international was added in 1934, after Carl Gustav Jung became president in 1933 and issued a series of statute ratifications for making the organization international and not discriminating members based on race, religion, or nationality.
References
- Sherry, Jay (2002). Maidenbaum, Aryeh (ed.). Jung and the Shadow of Anti-Semitism. Beriwck, ME: Nicolas-Hays. pp. 21–38.
- Maidenbaum, Aryeh (2002). Jung and the shadow of anti-Semitism. Berwick, ME: Nicolas-Hays. pp. 226–27. ISBN 0-89254040-0.
- Schoenl, William; Schoenl, Linda (September 2016). "Jung's views of Nazi Germany: the first year and Jung's transition: Jung's views of Nazi Germany". Journal of Analytical Psychology. 61 (4): 481–96. doi:10.1111/1468-5922.12238. PMID 27530169.
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