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This book presents and illustrates practice guidelines for working with diverse groups of women. Case studies apply the guidelines to women with multiple intersecting identities, emphasizing the use of strengths and resilience to promote empowerment.
List of contents
ContributorsSeries ForewordAcknowledgments- Transforming Psychological Practice With Women: An Introduction
Joy K. Rice, Carolyn Zerbe Enns, and Roberta L. Nutt - Working With Diverse Women: Tools for Assessment and Conceptualization
Carolyn Zerbe Enns, Joy K. Rice, and Roberta L. Nutt - Women and Girls of Black/African Descent
Wendi S. Williams - The Mosaic of Latinas in the United States: Psychological Practice With Latina Women and Girls
Dianna Marisol González, Carrie L. Castañeda-Sound, and Rachel L. Navarro - Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Women
Connie R. Matthews - The Intersection of Gender and Ethnicity: Asian–Pacific Islander American Women
Phi Loan Le and Khanh T. Dinh - Women With Disabilities: Affirmative Practice and Assessment
Martha E. Banks, Kathleen S. Brown, Linda R. Mona, and Rosalie J. Ackerman - Psychological Practice With Native Women
Wendy M. K. Peters, Kee J. E. Straits, and Pilar E. Gauthier - Transnational Psychological Practice With Women: Perspectives From East Asia and Japan
Sayaka Machizawa and Carolyn Zerbe Enns - Inclusive and Affirmative Psychological Practice: Unifying Themes
Joy K. Rice, Carolyn Zerbe Enns, and Roberta L. Nutt
IndexAbout the Editors
About the author
Edited by Carolyn Zerbe Enns, Joy K. Rice, and Roberta L. Nutt
Summary
The ambitious goal of this book is to transform how mental health practitioners understand and treat diverse groups of women. Doing so involves thinking in more nuanced ways about women's multiple identities that are formed from the complex interplay of ethnic and racial background, social class, sexual orientation, ability/disability status, religion, age, and other factors.