Publication | Closed Access
Constructing Cultural Competence: Perspectives of Family Therapists Working with Latino Families
61
Citations
18
References
2006
Year
EthnicityFamily MedicineEducationCounseling RoomCultural StudiesFamily StudiesLatino/a StudiesLatino CultureLatino FamiliesCultural IntegrationCultural DiversityCultural CompetenceLanguage StudiesMulticultural School PsychologyCultural SensitivityIntercultural EducationCultureCross-cultural AssessmentCross-cultural PerspectiveProfessional CounselingCultural PsychiatryFamily TherapySpanishCultural AnthropologyCultural CompetencyCultural Psychology
This article focuses on developing an understanding of how nine therapists working with Latino families construct the idea of cultural competence in the counseling room. In-depth interviews were conducted and analyzed yielding five themes in cultural competence from the therapists' perspectives: the use of language in therapy; the impact of social class, gender, and power on the therapeutic relationship; immigration and culture clash; definitions of family; and unique constructions of cultural competence. The therapists'narratives in this study are best understood through a postmodern paradigm suggesting that the field of psychotherapy needs to move beyond a “checklist” modernistic approach to developing cultural competency.
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