Race, Culture and Counselling
This substantially revised edition builds upon the foundations laid down in the first edition (which addressed, amongst other subjects, issues of race and power, cultures and their impact upon communication, and a review of the dominant theoretical discourses influencing counselling and psychotherapy and how these might impact upon mixed identity therapeutic relationships,) and includes the following additions:
Contributors: Courtland Lee; Roy Moodley; Gill Tuckwell; Val Watson |
Contents
Chapter 01 The climate the context and the challenge | 1 |
Chapter 02 Issues of race and power | 23 |
Chapter 03 Towards understanding culture | 40 |
Chapter 04 Cultural barriers to communication | 51 |
Chapter 05 Communication language gesture and interpretation | 65 |
intentions and limitations | 82 |
Chapter 07 Nonwestern approaches to helping | 102 |
Chapter 08 Training therapists to work with different and diverse clients | 120 |
Chapter 12 Updating the models of identity development | 179 |
Chapter 13 Key issues for black counselling practitioners in the UK with particular reference to their experiences in professional training | 187 |
have you noticed? | 198 |
Chapter 15 Specific issues for white counsellors | 204 |
addressing the intersections of class gender sexual orientation and different abilities | 217 |
Chapter 17 Race and culture in counselling research | 229 |
Definitions | 239 |
Bibliography | 244 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acceptance activity agency American approach areas aspects assumptions attitudes authors awareness become behaviour beliefs Britain British challenge chapter clients complex concept concerned considerable considered context continues counselling counselling and psychotherapy counsellors courses cultural described dimensions discussed diversity dominant edition effects ethnic example exist experience explore feelings forms further groups healing historical human ideas identity identity development impact important individual influence internalized interpreter involved issues knowledge language live major meaning mental minority models multicultural nature offer oppression organizations origins particular person perspective political position potential practice present problems professional psychological questions race racial racism range recognized reference reflect relation relationship responses role sense situation skills social society specific suggests supervisor theory therapeutic therapists therapy transcultural understanding values various
References to this book
Cross Cultural Awareness and Social Justice in Counseling Cyrus Marcellus Ellis,Jon Carlson No preview available - 2008 |