14 research outputs found
Expectations and Preferences for Counseling and Psychotherapy in Native Americans
We provide a broad overview of the research on expectations and preferences for counseling and psychotherapy with Native Americans and identify a critical lack of research in this area. We conclude that increased research could improve the effectiveness of counseling and psychotherapy for Native peoples. For example, understanding and engaging patients’ expectations and preferences would likely lead to increased retention and satisfaction. Finally, we suggest that a Native American clinical practice network might be one way to generate clinical and research knowledge in the area of expectations and preferences for psychotherapy and counseling
Recommended from our members
American Colonies: The Settling of North America. Volume 1, Penguin History of the United States. By Alan Taylor
Recommended from our members
Julian Steward and the Politics of Representation: A Critique of Anthropologist Julian Steward's Ethnographic Portrayals of the American Indians of the Great Basin
The main battle in imperialism is over land, of course; but when it came to who owned the land, who had the right to settle and work it, who kept it going, who won it back, and who now plans its future-these issues were reflected, contested, and even for a time decided in narrative.
The expansive region of the American Great Basin and its indigenous peoples hardly appear in most renditions of American history. Representing only a tiny fraction of the continent’s populace, the histories of the lands and peoples of this vast region remain largely excluded from the broader narratives of North American history. Unlike historians, anthropologists for the past century have maintained considerable interest in the Indians of the Great Basin. This paper examines the representations of Great Basin Indians by Julian Steward-the preeminent anthropologist of the region. Developing theories of cultural change that have influenced generations of anthropologists, Steward pioneered both the study of the Great Basin Indians as well as American anthropology with his ethnographic research of the 1930s
Recommended from our members