Preface.-Part I: Intersectionality and Disability.-Mental Health, Multicultural Competence, and Cultural Humility from an Intersectionality Framework.-Archetypes of Black Womanhood: Implications for Mental Health, Coping & Help-Seeking.-Disability Culture.-Deaf Mental Health: Enhancing linguistically and culturally appropriate clinical practice.-Part II: Immigrant and Indigenous Mental Health.-Best Practices and Research Perspectives Working When with Immigrant Groups.-A health promotion framework for women with precarious immigration status in Canada.-Living in a Refugee Camps: The Syrian Case in Jordan.-Exploring an Islamically-Integrated Peer Support Model for Muslim Syrian Refugees.-The Impact of Cultural Beliefs on Mental Health Diagnosis and Treatment.-Depression, cardiovascular disease and Indigenous Australians.-Culture Through a Clinical Lens.-Trauma and Its Impacts.-Part III: Culture and Mental Health.-Supporting Post-Secondary Youth Mental Health through Inclusive Practices Attuned to Culture.-a cross-cultural study on the experience of shame and guilt.-a cross-cultural study on dimensions of experiences of shame and guilt between mainland chinese and euro-canadians.-Social Capital and the Quality of Life of parents of children with Autism Spectrum Disorders – a comparison between Bedouin Fathers and Mothers.-culture and psychopathology: contributions of the philosophical and clinic phenomenologies
Dr. Masood Zangeneh is Professor in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Sciences and Innovative Learning, Humber College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning.
He is Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction (Springer Publications) and is a consultant to numerous scientific journals and universities for interdisciplinary, multi-cultural research and development addressing mental health, addiction and resilience among marginalized populations.
Dr. Zangeneh has led numerous international collaborative programs and research initiatives; and, he has served as the Ben Gurion University (BGU) – Regional Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research (RADAR) Center Visiting Professor addressing multi-ethnic youth resilience through research, training, education and publication.
Alean Al-Krenawi, PhD, is professor and chair of the BSW Program, Spitzer Department of Social Work, Ben-Guiron University of the Negev. He is former President of Achva Academic College, and former Dean of the School of Social Work, Memorial Unviersity of Newfoundland, Canada. His works focuses on the challenges facing indigenous and minority groups in the Middle East, Canada, and the West, and studies the effects of cultural phenomena on these populations. His work has been utilized in academia, policymaking, and professional practices worldwide advocating on behalf of historically disadvantaged groups in larger cultural contexts. He applies an interdisciplinary approach centered on diversity and multiculturalism. He is co-author of more than 2000 academic journal articles, and many of his publications are in the top 50 most cited articles in social work.
This book discusses the importance of culture and diversity within society through multicultural, cross-cultural, and intercultural encounters while applying psychological effectiveness to manage core competencies. It carefully explains how influential the social environment is to an individual within a society. It seeks to directly affect mental health practitioners’ treatment within practices in accordance to specific ethno-cultural clients; and it seeks to encourage students and practitioners to practice acceptance of diverse groups and multiracial communities. Although understanding various cultural norms and accepting diversity is not always simple, the book promotes a global understanding through identifying cultural benefits within a multiracial, multi-ethnic society, while evoking culturally competent techniques for mental health practitioners.