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The competent community: Toward a vital reformulation of professional ethics.
77
Citations
69
References
2012
Year
Competence ObligationEducationHealth PsychologyClinical Health PsychologyVital ReformulationAutonomyProfessional EthicSocial SciencesPsychologyProfessional PreparationEthical AnalysisCultural CompetenceMulticultural School PsychologyCultural SensitivityCultureMedical EthicsCross-cultural AssessmentCross-cultural PerspectiveEthical LeadershipTeaching EthicProfessional DevelopmentOwn CompetenceSocial ResponsibilityCultural Psychology
Psychologists are ethically obligated to ensure their own competence. When problems of professional competence occur, psychologists must take appropriate steps to regain competence while protecting those they serve. Yet conceptualizations of the competence obligation are thoroughly intertwined with Western ideals of individualism and a model of the person as self-contained, self-controlled, and perpetually rational. Research in health care, education, and multicultural and social psychology raise serious doubts about psychologists' capacity for consistently accurate self-assessments of competence. To address this problem, the authors advocate that education, training, professional ethics standards, and credentialing criteria be infused with a robust communitarian ethos and a culturally pervasive ethic of care. The authors propose a shift in discourse about competence to incorporate both competent individuals and competent communities.
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