Publication | Closed Access
Community psychology and politics
63
Citations
7
References
1994
Year
Community PerceptionSocial PsychologyPolitical ProcessPolitical BehaviorMental HealthSocial SciencesPsychologySocietal PressuresClinical PsychologyCommunity PsychologyPersonal DistressApplied Social PsychologyPolitical PhysiologyPsychosocial ResearchPsychosocial IssueCommunity Mental HealthCommunity OrganizingSociologyPolitical AttitudesPolitical ScienceTherapeutic Potency
Abstract If community psychology is to profit from its experience to develop an accurate and consistent theory of the effect on individuals of societal pressures, it will need to review reflexively its own position in relation to politics and empowerment. Despite an inspirational and at times positively grandiose rhetoric, psychologists are in fact in no particularly powerful position to influence the factors which cause personal distress, and should not, through a pretence of therapeutic potency, ‘psychologize’ the notion of ‘empowerment’ and reinforce therapeutic ideals which are in fact destructively normative. Without attempting to appropriate politics, community psychology can, however, offer an essentially scientific analysis of power and distress, which may have therapeutically ‘demystifying’ qualities as well as important political implications for the wider society.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1