Worth. „When Scientists Are Mad about Each Other”, Scientific American (Hozzáférés: 2018. január 5.) (angol nyelvű) „In lectures they frequently discuss the moment when Maslach argued with Zimbardo in the parking lot, which Zimbardo describes as an act of heroism, because she stood up for her principles even though she knew the consequence might be losing his and his colleagues’ approval—and ending a relationship she cared about.”
socialpsychology.org
maslach.socialpsychology.org
Scott Plous: Christina Maslach. Maslach.socialpsychology.org. (Hozzáférés: 2012. június 27.)
stanford.edu
news.stanford.edu
The Stanford Prison Experiment: Still powerful after all these years (1/97). News.stanford.edu, 1996. augusztus 12. [2011. november 18-i dátummal az eredetiből archiválva]. (Hozzáférés: 2018. július 12.) „Maslach walked into the mock prison on the evening of the fifth day. Having just received her doctorate from Stanford and starting an assistant professorship at Berkeley, she had agreed to do subject interviews the next day and had come down the night before to familiarize herself with the experiment.”
alumni.stanford.edu
Ratnasar: The Menace Within. Stanford Alumni Magazine, 2011 [2012. szeptember 15-i dátummal az eredetiből archiválva]. (Hozzáférés: 2018. július 12.) „The clearest influence the study had on me was that it raised some really serious questions about how people cope with extremely emotional, difficult situations, especially when it's part of their job—when they have to manage people or take care of them or rehabilitate them. So I started interviewing people. I started with some prison guards in a real prison, and talked to them about their jobs and how they understood what they were doing...I interviewed people who worked in hospitals, in the ER. After a while I realized there was a rhythm and pattern emerging, and when I described it to someone they said, "I don't know what it's called in other professions, but in our occupation we call it 'burnout.'”
web.archive.org
Archivált másolat. [2020. szeptember 3-i dátummal az eredetiből archiválva]. (Hozzáférés: 2020. augusztus 24.)
The Stanford Prison Experiment: Still powerful after all these years (1/97). News.stanford.edu, 1996. augusztus 12. [2011. november 18-i dátummal az eredetiből archiválva]. (Hozzáférés: 2018. július 12.) „Maslach walked into the mock prison on the evening of the fifth day. Having just received her doctorate from Stanford and starting an assistant professorship at Berkeley, she had agreed to do subject interviews the next day and had come down the night before to familiarize herself with the experiment.”
Ratnasar: The Menace Within. Stanford Alumni Magazine, 2011 [2012. szeptember 15-i dátummal az eredetiből archiválva]. (Hozzáférés: 2018. július 12.) „The clearest influence the study had on me was that it raised some really serious questions about how people cope with extremely emotional, difficult situations, especially when it's part of their job—when they have to manage people or take care of them or rehabilitate them. So I started interviewing people. I started with some prison guards in a real prison, and talked to them about their jobs and how they understood what they were doing...I interviewed people who worked in hospitals, in the ER. After a while I realized there was a rhythm and pattern emerging, and when I described it to someone they said, "I don't know what it's called in other professions, but in our occupation we call it 'burnout.'”