Mental Research Institute

[1] Founded by Don D. Jackson and colleagues in 1958, MRI has been one of the leading sources of ideas in the area of interactional/systemic studies, psychotherapy, and family therapy.

Fostering a climate of almost untrammeled experimentalism, MRI started the first formal training program in family therapy, produced some of the seminal early papers and books in the field, and became a place where some of the field's leading figures - Paul Watzlawick, Richard Fisch, Jules Riskin, Virginia Satir, Salvador Minuchin, R.D.

[1][4] The Brief Therapy Center at MRI was founded by Dick Fisch, John Weakland, and Paul Watzlawick.

Continuing applied research and theory development have expanded the use of interactional concepts to community, school and business.

[5] The Mental Research Institute (MRI), established in 1958 by Donald deAvila Jackson,[6] is a small, independent, multi-disciplinary, non-profit corporation: The focus of MRI is to explore and to encourage the use of an interactional approach to further understand and more effectively resolve human problems from the family to all other levels of social organization.