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Byars-Winston, Angela – Counseling Psychologist, 2012
This article builds on assertions in Richardson's (2012, this issue) Major Contribution on counseling for work and relationship. In this reaction, I expand on the relevance and potential of the counseling for work and relationship perspective to enrich the field of counseling psychology. My comments focus on three considerations to further extend…
Descriptors: Cultural Relevance, Psychologists, Counseling Psychology, Family Work Relationship
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Speight, Suzette L. – Counseling Psychologist, 2012
This article explores the boundaries between clinicians and clients in light of the construct of solidarity. A universal conception of boundaries is critiqued and a culturally congruent view of boundaries is examined, rooted in the concept of solidarity. The article includes case illustrations of the connection between boundaries and solidarity…
Descriptors: Mental Health Workers, Mental Health, Counseling Effectiveness, Counseling Services
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Mohatt, Gerald V. – Counseling Psychologist, 2010
In 1951 the anthropologist and psychoanalyst George Devereux wrote "Reality and Dream," on his analysis of an American Indian patient. In the prologue to the book, he summarizes his approach as such: "Whatever happened between Jimmy and myself on the personal level happened between two men of good will and concerns only us: it concerns two men…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, American Indians, American Indian Culture, Psychotherapy
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Gone, Joseph P. – Counseling Psychologist, 2010
Multicultural advocates within professional psychology routinely call for "culturally competent" counseling interventions. Such advocates frequently cite and celebrate traditional healing practices as an important resource for developing novel integrative forms of psychotherapy that are distinctively tailored for diverse populations. Despite this…
Descriptors: American Indians, Psychology, Psychotherapy, Counseling Techniques
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Boyd-Franklin, Nancy – Counseling Psychologist, 2010
This article discusses the process of incorporating spirituality and religion into the treatment of African American clients. It addresses religious diversity within the African American community. The roles of spirituality and religion as survival and coping mechanisms for overcoming racism, adversity, and loss are emphasized. The cases presented…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Cultural Influences, African Americans, African American Culture
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Vera, Elizabeth M. – Counseling Psychologist, 2007
The following article is a response to Adams's (2007 [this issue]) and Griffin and Miller's (2007 [this issue]) reactions to the Major Contribution articles presented on Culturally Relevant Prevention. Each reaction article identifies important implications for engaging in culturally relevant prevention efforts that are relevant to developing this…
Descriptors: Prevention, Counseling Psychology, Politics, Cultural Relevance
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Killion, Cheryl M. – Counseling Psychologist, 2007
In this reaction article to the Major Contribution, the merits and challenges of implementing patient-centered culturally sensitive health care, or cultural competence plus, are explicated. Three themes are addressed: separate but equal?, factoring in mental health, and sharing the load. The need to refine the conceptualization of the two…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Counseling Psychology, Cultural Relevance, Health Services
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Herman, Keith C.; Tucker, Carolyn M.; Ferdinand, Lisa A.; Mirsu-Paun, Anca; Hasan, Nadia T.; Beato, Cristina – Counseling Psychologist, 2007
This article introduces the Major Contribution, which focuses on counseling psychologists' roles in addressing health disparities through culturally sensitive health care research and interventions. First, the authors provide a rationale for conducting research focused on culturally sensitive health care and then offer definitions of…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Counseling Psychology, Cultural Relevance, Health Services
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Reese, Le'Roy E.; Vera, Elizabeth M. – Counseling Psychologist, 2007
For over a decade, there have been increasing efforts in counseling psychology and other areas of applied psychology to understand the role of culture in preventive and mental health services for ethnically, economically, and religiously diverse communities. In this Major Contribution, the authors offer examples of three prevention programs in…
Descriptors: Health Services, Cultural Relevance, Prevention, Mental Health Programs
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Griffin, James P., Jr.; Miller, Erica – Counseling Psychologist, 2007
This article is a response to a number of articles that use a culturally relevant prevention (CRP) approach for ethnic and racial minorities. The reaction is from a research practitioner's viewpoint. The authors argue in favor of determining an operational definition of cultural relevance by implementing prevention services with fidelity in the…
Descriptors: Cultural Relevance, Prevention, Ethnic Groups, Health Promotion
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Heppner, P. Paul – Counseling Psychologist, 2006
The central thesis of this article is that focusing on cross-cultural competence will enhance both the science and the practice of counseling psychology. Developing cross-cultural competence is a lifelong journey, replete with many joys and challenges, that will (a) increase the sophistication of our research, (b) expand the utility and…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Cultural Context, Counseling Effectiveness, Health Needs
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Tucker, Carolyn M.; Herman, Keith C.; Ferdinand, Lisa A.; Bailey, Tamika R.; Lopez, Manuel Thomas; Beato, Cristina; Adams, Diane; Cooper, Leslie L. – Counseling Psychologist, 2007
This article describes the literature-based, testable, formative Patient-Centered Culturally Sensitive Health Care Model that explains the associations between patient-centered culturally sensitive health care, health-promoting treatment behaviors, and health outcomes and statuses. An intervention program based on the model and its foundational…
Descriptors: Intervention, Formative Evaluation, Program Descriptions, Cultural Relevance
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Watts, Roderick J. – Counseling Psychologist, 2004
This article seeks to extend the model Goodman et al. advanced for making counseling psychology training more useful in the struggle for social justice. In addition to affirming the ideas of Goodman et al., this article offers some specific examples of how conventional, micro-level ideas in U.S. psychology can be scaled upward to be useful across…
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Justice, Counseling Psychology, Social Influences
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Leung, S. Alvin – Counseling Psychologist, 2003
Although it is an established psychological specialty in the United States, counseling psychology is still a culturally encapsulated discipline confined to its national borders. Internationalizing the discipline will require colleagues in the United States to examine their attitudes, abandon their sense of self-sufficiency, and engage counseling…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Multilingualism, Counselor Training, Global Approach