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Amer, Mona M.; Bagasra, Anisah – American Psychologist, 2013
Like other minority groups in North America, Muslim Americans have been largely ignored in the psychological literature. The overwhelming pressures faced by this group, including surveillance, hate crimes, and institutional discrimination, stimulate an urgent need for psychologists to better understand and ensure the well-being of this population.…
Descriptors: North Americans, Muslims, Minority Groups, Social Science Research
Silverstein, Louise Bordeaux; Auerbach, Carl F. – American Psychologist, 2009
Kazdin pointed out that the requirement for evidence-based practice (EBP) has made the long-standing gap between research and practice in clinical psychology even more salient. He offered several strategies for bridging this gap: investigating mechanisms and moderators of therapeutic change, and qualitative research. We agree that qualitative…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Clinical Psychology, Cultural Relevance, Theory Practice Relationship
American Psychologist, 2009
Michael G. Wessells, recipient of the International Humanitarian Award, is cited for his pioneering and sustained contributions to the protection of children affected by armed conflict and to the development of international guidelines for the provision of community-based, culturally responsive psychosocial support in emergencies. Wessells has…
Descriptors: Recognition (Achievement), Conflict, Foreign Countries, Psychology
Wampold, Bruce E. – American Psychologist, 2007
Although it is well established that psychotherapy is remarkably effective, the change process in psychotherapy is not well understood. Psychotherapy is compared with medicine and cultural healing practices to argue that critical aspects of psychotherapy involve human processes that are used in religious, spiritual, and cultural healing practices.…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Psychotherapy, Cultural Relevance, Counseling Techniques
Jacobs, Gerard A. – American Psychologist, 2007
Humanitarian psychological support as an organized field is relatively young. Pioneers in the field were involved primarily in providing psychological support to refugees and internally displaced persons in conflict and nonconflict situations. This article describes basic principles for the design of psychological support programs and…
Descriptors: First Aid, Program Design, Mentors, International Organizations
Vasquez, Melba J. T. – American Psychologist, 2007
The research on positive psychotherapy outcome consistently indicates that the quality of the alliance is important across different models of psychotherapy (D. E. Orlinsky, M. H. Ronnestad, & U. Willutzki, 2004; B. E. Wampold, 2000). Social psychological research has documented how "unintentional bias" can produce barriers to university…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Psychologists, Counselor Client Relationship, Cultural Differences
Sternberg, Robert J. – American Psychologist, 2004
Intelligence cannot be fully or even meaningfully understood outside its cultural context. Work that seeks to study intelligence acontextually risks the imposition of an investigator's view of the world on the rest of the world. Moreover, work on intelligence within a single culture may fail to do justice to the range of skills and knowledge that…
Descriptors: Cultural Relevance, Research Methodology, Intelligence, Cultural Context
Walsh, Roger; Shapiro, Shauna L. – American Psychologist, 2006
Meditation is now one of the most enduring, widespread, and researched of all psychotherapeutic methods. However, to date the meeting of the meditative disciplines and Western psychology has been marred by significant misunderstandings and by an assimilative integration in which much of the richness and uniqueness of meditation and its…
Descriptors: Psychology, Pathology, Metacognition, Psychotherapy

Dudley-Grant, G. Rita – American Psychologist, 2001
Discusses family therapy as one means of intervening in the social decay that is rapidly occurring in the Virgin Islands and Caribbean community and that is manifested in the antisocial behavior of young people, focusing on the evolution of this antisocial behavior and the therapist's and the community's role in maintaining juvenile delinquency or…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Antisocial Behavior, Behavior Disorders, Blacks