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Appalachian Americans: Issues and Concerns for Counseling and Psychotherapy

Appalachian Americans: Issues and Concerns for Counseling and Psychotherapy

9781536165425
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Description
This is an edited book written by Drs. Daya Singh Sandhu, Jeffrey Parsons, Quentin Hunter, has recently made debut in the fields of multicultural and cross-cultural scholarship and practice as sui generis, a unique book of its kind in many ways. This is perhaps one of the few books that brings counseling needs and mental health problems of the Appalachian people at the forefront for the first time. Generally, Appalachian Americans have been neglected, overlooked, or just forgotten. Since the Civil Rights Act 1964, when culturally different, racially diverse, and people of color started getting attention as an integral part of the American society, multiculturalism became one of the major research interests of social scientists. Most of the multicultural scholarship focused on the cultural identity, cultural worldviews, cultural values of five major racial groups which included, European Americans, African Americans, Latina/Latino Americans, Asian Americans, and Native Americans. Appalachian Americans:: Issues and Concerns for Counseling and Psychotherapy is very different, unique, and distinct from most of the previous multicultural publications. This book is not based on the racial or cultural identity of the Appalachian people, it is distinctly based on the issues relating to social marginalization, economic and social injustices, and inequities. It focuses much of its attention on the impact of the oppression and marginalization on Appalachian peoples lives. In its very are attempt, this powerful book explores and discusses the effects of geography on the personality and special rules for living of the Appalachian Americans. Appalachian trails also called trails of tears, have been sadly neglected by the multicultural scholarship and institutions of higher learning. While people in the other parts of the country enjoy beautiful sceneries of mountains and their ranges, people from Appalachia call their challenges of life as mountains of problems. The contributors of this book are commended for opening new vistas and visions for the Appalachian people to tread proudly and fearlessly on many unbeaten paths of their lives without worrying about becoming prisoners of mountains. More than ethnic, cultural, and racial conflicts, Appalachian people face more economical and environmental racism and discriminations mostly caused by the big corporations who are hungry for coal from the Appalachia. Many authors have discussed issues relating to social, psychological, and environmental needs of the Appalachian people and offered strategies of social justice and advocacy to deal with poverty, injustices, and social marginalization that is so prevalent in the Appalachian Land. The aim of this textbook is to address the mental health problems and counseling needs of the Appalachian people and it is indispensable for mental health professionals, professional counselors, psychologists, social workers, psychiatrists, and all other people interested in the physical, emotional, and spiritual well-being of the Appalachian people. I hope it will adorn your home library soon.
Product Details
82158
9781536165425
9781536165425

Data sheet

Publication date
2020
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
421
Dimensions (mm)
180.00 x 260.00
  • Introduction; Appalachian Americans:: The Invisible Minority; Appalachian-Americans Collectivist Values:: Implications for Counseling; Reckoning Appalachia:: Considerations for Culturally Counseling in an Appalachian Context; Value Systems and Mental Health Awareness in Appalachia:: Exploration of Wellness and Quality of Life; Implications for Complicated Grief in Appalachia; Identification and Treatment of Dyslexia in Appalachian School Systems; Career Counseling and Development in Appalachia; Climbing the Stone Wall:: Clinical Resistance in Appalachian-American Clients; Appalachia, My Heart, My Home:: Some Personal Experiences and Perspectives; Appalachian Young Womans Struggles:: A Critical Appraisal and Appreciation of an Autobiographical Narrative; Men in Appalachia:: Considerations for Counselors; Play Therapy with Appalachian Youth; Appalachian Single Mothers Attending College; Domestic Violence in Appalachia:: Changing the Culture of Abuse and Trauma; Counseling Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Appalachian Clients; An Intersectional Approach; Trans-affirmative Counseling with Family Members of People Identifying as Transgender; Counseling Latino and Spanish-Speaking Clients; Vocational Rehabilitation Concerns for Adults with Disabilities and Chronic Health Conditions in Appalachia; Engaging Rural Clients with Substance Abuse Concerns Through the Use of Motivational Interviewing; Promoting Effective Treatment and Public Health Efforts to Combat Use of Smokeless Tobacco Products among Appalachian Male Adults and Youth; Diversity Assessment Scale:: Indicators of Diversity Implementation in Higher Education; Appalachia and Appalachian Americans; Multicultural, Diversity, and Minority Issues:: Some Selected Concepts; Final Reflections:: An Epilogue; About the Editors; About the Contributors; Index.
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