Publication | Closed Access
Psychotherapy, Classism, and the Poor: Conspicuous by Their Absence.
181
Citations
50
References
2005
Year
Social InequalityOwn ClassismClass ConflictSociologySocial ClassPrevent PsychotherapistsPoor ClientsPovertyOccupational TherapySocial SciencesEducationSocial ExclusionSocial StratificationClass AnalysisPsychoanalytic PsychotherapyPsychology
Four decades of research have delineated the need for improved psychotherapeutic opportunities for poor clients, yet psychotherapists remain contradictory in their stance regarding service to the poor. Despite periodic calls within the field to address the needs of poor people, evidence from the psychotherapeutic literature suggests that the poor are still largely absent from consideration. What barriers prevent psychotherapists from enacting their professional principles more consistently on behalf of poor clients? The author suggests that unexamined classist assumptions constitute a significant obstacle for practitioners and presents the experience of confronting her own classism to illustrate the operation of these attitudinal barriers.
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