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Robert H. Simmons, Ph.D.

Education

University of Washington, Seattle, Ph.D., 1962 (Political Science, Public Administration, Organisational Behavior)

University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, M.A., 1951 (Political Science, Social Work)

University of Dubuque, Iowa, B.A., cum laude, 1949 (Political Science, Psycology, Sociology)

Fields of Academic Specialization

Dissertation The Washington Plural Executive: An Experiment in Interaction Analysis

Current Activities

Organizational Development Consultant

I create and guide transformational change in corporations, businesses, professional offices, and public agencies. I have developed a variety of processes and techniques that transform the ordinary, everyday workplace into a satisfying, cooperative, healthy place to work. Employees, managers, and work groups become fully empowered and effective. This is achieved by diagnosing organizational needs, with particular attention to the organizational unconscious, and by designing programs responsive to those needs. This is followed by guiding and implementing the necessary changes to accomplish those programs.

Partial List of Organizational Development Clients

Consultant to Individuals, Couples, and Families

I maintain a private educational practice with individuals, couples, and families. This practice encompasses the application of organizational development to the dynamics of individual behavior, couple dynamics, and family systems. It is a learning, training, and development experience that promotes individual growth, enhances coupled relationships, and promotes family problem–solving effectiveness and community–building.

Relationship Workshops and Seminars

Workshops and seminars based on Beyond Romance, Making Love Last.

History

1981 – present     Private consulting practice

1995 – 2000        Cofounder, Chief Executive Officer and Vice–Chairperson of the Board, PhysicianWellness Foundation. Executive Director, PhysicianWellness Conference, September 25– 29, 1997

1985                    Awarded Professor Emeritus, California State University Los Angeles

1978 – 1991        Co–founded Support Group Network.

1962 – 1985        Professor of Political Science and Public Administration, California State University Los Angeles

1958 – 1962        Assistant Professor of Political Science, New Mexico Highlands University, Las Vegas, New Mexico

1954 – 1958        Teacher, Social Science and History, Valley High School, Albuquerque, New Mexico

1950 – 1954        Supervisor, Technical Report Writing Section, Sandia Corporation, prime contractor to the A.E.C., Albuquerque, New Mexico

1944 – 1946        U.S. Navy. Enlisted at age 17 from high school and honorably discharged as a Pharmacist's Mate 3rd Class

Books in Preparation

Managing the Organizational Unconscious: The Ultimate Management Challenge

This book delivers the clear message that the success of an organization is wholly reliant upon the dynamics, processes, and operations that lie within the organizational unconscious. Eric Berne observed:

. . . the effectiveness of the work group depends upon the success of the process group.

This may be designated as Berne's Law. Simply stated, the successful outcome of organizational activity depends upon effectively processing the emotional life of the organization. That is, the results of rational effort rely wholly upon effectively dealing with the non–rational aspects of the organization.


The Unconscious in Politics: A meeting of Aristotle and Wilfred Bion

Aristotle identified three forms of government which evolve from one form to another The Aristotelian classifications were government by the one, the few or the many. For Aristotle any of these forms of government could be good government or bad government. His ethical imperative was that government which governs in the interest of all is good government and that government which governs in the interest of the one, the few or the many is bad government.


For Wilfred Bion choice is driven by the fundamental "law of life" – projection. He observed the operations of projection in small group work at the Tavistock Institute in London. He noticed some unique behavior in small groups, which he called "as if" groups – groups he identified as pairing, fight/flight and dependency groups.


This book will take the observations of Wilfred Bion and apply them to the Aristotelian classifications of government today and discover what this might mean for American Democracy.

Books and Publications

Beyond Romance, Making Love Last. Far Hills, New Jersey: New Horizon Press, 2005.


Achieving Humane Organization. Malibu, California: Daniel Spencer Publishers, 1981.


Public Administration, Values, Policy and Change, with Eugene P. Dvorin. Port Washington, New York: Alfred Publishing Co., Inc. 1977.


A Taskbook on Survival in Groups and Organizations, Los Angeles: Trident Shop, California State University Los Angeles, 1976.


From Amoral to Humane Bureaucracy, with Eugene P. Dvorin. San Francisco: Harper Row, Inc., Publishers, 1972. [Fourth most–quoted book in public administration for two decades.]


Editor, The United States in a Revolutionary World. Pasadena: American Friends Service Committee, 1968.


Government and American Society with Ake Sandler, Editors. Dubuque: Wm. C. Brown, Publishers, 1965.


Lecture Summaries and Workbook for Government and American Society, with Walter H. Cunningham. Berkeley: McCutchan Publishing Company, 1964.


Articles Published:

" Policy Flow Analysis: A Conceptual Model for Comparative Public Policy Research," with Bruce Davis, Ralph J. K. Chapman, and Daniel Sager, Western Political Quarterly, September 1974.


"Australian State Administration: A Need for New Perspectives," with Ralph J. K. Chapman, Bruce W. Davis, and Michael Wood Public Administration, Sydney, March 1974.


"The Political Context of Student Protest," with A. Didrick Castberg, Sociological Symposium, Autumn, 1974.


"Public Administration: The Enigma of Definition, " Social Science, October 1970, pp. 202–207.


"The Transition of the Washington Executive from Territory to Statehood," Pacific Northwest Quarterly, April 1964, pp. 76–86.


In the Western Political Quarterly:


"A Brief Survey of American State Executive Studies with a Suggested New Departure," December 1964.


"A Possible Theoretical Approach to the Analysis of American State Executive Systems," March 1965.


"The Washington State Plural Executive: An Initial Effort in Interaction Analysis," June 1975.


"The Role of the Select Committee on Nationalized Industry in Parliament," Western Political Quarterly, September 1961.


"National Purpose and the American Dream, " The National Purpose, A Symposium, Institute for American Studies, Las Vegas, New Mexico, New Mexico Highlands University Press, 1961, pp. 45–51.


"Administration of State Investments," First Report of Governor's Expenditures Advisory Council. Olympia, (State of) Washington, 1960, pp. 137–39.

Publications for Relationship and Family Workshops' Organizational Development

Special Awards

Contributions

Community Affairs

College Contributions

Department of Political Science and Public Administration, California State University Los Angeles

University Contributions

Course Development–full responsibility for development, approvals, catalogue copy and teaching:

The following are utilized at the upper division level as well as in the graduate program:

Courses regularly taught in addition to those above. As above, these are either upper division and/or graduate courses:

In the Consortium of the California State University System, Master Degree in Public Administration Program (MPA).



Resume / Vitae
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