Mudita Rastogi and Elizabeth Wieling
Chapter 1: Introduction
Section I: Identity and Professional Development of Therapists of Color
Monika Sharma
Chapter 2: Emerging Identity: An Asian Indian Female Psychologist's Perspective
Luis Antonio Rivas, Edward A. Delgado-Romero, and Kelly Ramon Ozambela
Chapter 3: Our Stories: Convergence of the Language, Professional, and Personal Identities of Three Latino Therapists
Janet M. Derrick
Chapter 4: When Turtle Met Rabbit: Native Family Systems
Section II: Ethnicity and Race in the Therapy Room and in the Classroom
Shalonda Kelly and Nancy Boyd-Franklin
Chapter 5: African American Women in Client, Therapist, and Supervisory Relationships: The Parallel Processes of Race, Culture, and Family
Larry Lee
Chapter 6: Taking Off the Mask: Breaking the Silence--The Art of Naming Racism in the Therapy Room
Saba Rasheed Ali, Jonathan R. Flojo, Krista M. Chronister, Diane Hayashino, Quincy R. Smiling, Danielle Torres, and Ellen Hawley McWhirter
Chapter 7: When Racism Is Reversed: Therapists of Color Speak About Their Experiences With Racism From Clients, Supervisees, and Supervisors
Debra A. Nixon
Chapter 8: Toward a Liberation Pedagogy: Creating a Safe Environment for Diversity Conversations in the Classroom
Azmaira H. Maker
Chapter 9: Post 9/11: Combating Racism in the Sanctity of Healing--A Clinical Vignette Utilizing a Cultural Process Dialogue
Laurie L. Charles
Chapter 10: Stories From Urban and Rural Landscapes: The Development of a Cultural Identity
Carmen Aguirre, J. Maria Bermudez, J. Ruben Parra Cardona, Jorge Antonio Zamora, and Nenetzin Angelica Reyes
Chapter 11: The Process of Integrating Language, Context, and Meaning: The Voices of Bilingual and Bicultural Therapists
Mudita Rastogi and Carole Woolford-Hunt
Chapter 12: International Academic Sojourners in the United States of America: Color in the Ivory Tower
Section III: Theory- and Research-Based Interventions and Approaches
Azmaira H. Maker, Mona Mittal, and Mudita Rastogi
Chapter 13: South Asians in the United States: Developing a Systemic and Empirically Based Mental Health Assessment Model
Denise D. McAdory
Chapter 14: Black Women Victims and Perpetrators of Family Domestic Violence: A Therapeutic Model Incorporating Racism and Black History
Narumi Taniguchi
Chapter 15: From Polarization to Pluralization: The Japanese Sense of Self and Bowen Theory
Martha Adams Sullivan
Chapter 16: Kum Ba Yah: The Relevance of Family Systems Theory for Clinicians and Clients of African Descent
Nithyakala Karuppaswamy and Rajeswari Natrajan
Chapter 17: Family Therapy From a Hindu Indian Worldview
Melanie Domenech Rodriguez and Elizabeth Wieling
Chapter 18: Developing Culturally Appropriate, Evidence Based Treatments for Interventions With Ethnic Minority Populations
J. Ruben Parra Cardona, Richard S. Wampler, and Dean M. Busby
Chapter 19: Acculturation Versus Cultural Identity: The Need for New Cultural Lenses in the Mental Health Professions
Index