Multicultural Counseling in a Divided and Traumatized Society: The Meaning of Childhood and Adolescence in South Africa
By (Author) Joyce Hickson
By (author) Susan Kriegler
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
18th April 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Child welfare and youth services
Age groups: adolescents
Clinical psychology
Child, developmental and lifespan psychology
362.70968
Hardback
200
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
482g
This book is developed from the framework of locating childhood and adolescence within the wider context of South African society. The merging world-view and identity of South African children are described. A portion of the book describes the psychological traumas associated with political unrest and a society undergoing major transition, paying particular attention to three major traumas: child abuse and neglect, children who have been the victims of an unjust and inequitable educational system, and children caught in the war of political violence. The book addresses issues within the South African context by recognizing the effects of the wider social, economic, and political setting. By promoting a better understanding of diverse cultures, a mechanism is in place for bringing about reconciliation in a divided society.
Hickson draws on the extensive South African experience to present a challenging and helpful manual, designed to increase the relevance and effectiveness of counseling interventions in racially divided nations. While Eurocentric approaches may be useful to the white minority, for most of the population they must be replaced....The book is especially helpful in providing awareness and knowledge, making a compelling argument for the mental health worker as advocate...-Choice
"Hickson draws on the extensive South African experience to present a challenging and helpful manual, designed to increase the relevance and effectiveness of counseling interventions in racially divided nations. While Eurocentric approaches may be useful to the white minority, for most of the population they must be replaced....The book is especially helpful in providing awareness and knowledge, making a compelling argument for the mental health worker as advocate..."-Choice
JOYCE HICKSON received her Ph.D. in counseling from Mississippi State University. Dr. Hickson spent six years in the southern Africa region where she was a Professor with the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg and worked as a consultant to several African nations. She currently serves as Chair of the Department of Counseling and Clinical Programs at Columbus College in Columbus, Georgia. SUSAN KRIEGLER is Associate Professsor of Education Psychology and Special Education at the University of Pretoria./e She is a recipient of the Psychological Association of South Africa's Presidents Award for her contribution to renewal in the profession.