A comprehensive and refreshing compendium of historical, psycho-socio-cultural, and clinical perspectives on migration-related issues. This volume is both a well-elaborated set of reflections about a global-and still unpredictable-phenomenon, and an invitation to focus even more on the life and fate of immigrants coming to the U.S.A., impelled by a dream and in search of themselves.
Eugenio Rothe MD is Professor of Psychiatry, Founding Faculty Member of the Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, Courtesy Professor of the Robert Stempel School of Public Health, and Adjunct Professor of the Cuban Research Institute and Latin American and Caribbean Center at Florida International University. He is a Distinguished Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry and a Psychoanalytic Fellow of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry and he is also board certified in Forensic Psychiatry. Dr. Rothe has dedicated his career to treating the multicultural adults, children and families of South Florida and has written extensively about the mental health issues of
immigrants, refugees and patients of diverse cultural backgrounds and about psychological trauma in these populations. Dr. Rothe has been selected for the Best Doctors in America list for the past six years and is a reviewer for five
scientific journals. He is President of the American Association of Social Psychiatry and President of the South Florida Council of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Past Chair of the American Psychiatric Association's Committee for Mental Health in the Schools and Past-Chair of the Scientific Program Committee of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry, among others. He has been the recipient of: 1) The Edward D. Harris Medical Professionalism Award of
the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society, 2) The Bruno Lima Award and 3) Nancy Roeske Award of the American Psychiatric Association, the 4) Jeanne Spurlock Award and the 5) Distinguished Member Award of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 6) The Citation for Civilian Merit from the U.S. Armed
Forces, and 7) five-time recipient of Outstanding Teacher in Psychiatry awards from the University of Miami.
Andres Pumariega MD is Professor and Chief, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry in the Department of Psychiatry at University of Florida College of Medicine and UF Health. He is a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association (APA) and the Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP), and Fellow of the American College of Psychiatrists and American Orthopsychiatric Association. He has served as Associate Editor of the American Journal of
Orthopsychiatry and the Journal of Child and Family Studies, and on the Editorial Board of Community Mental Health Journal, Journal of Child and Family Studies, and is currently the Associate Editor of Adolescent Psychiatry. He co-led the drafting of the CMHS Cultural Competence Standards (1999) and the AACAP Practice
Parameter for Culturally Competent Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Care (2013), the only cultural competence practice parameters in Medicine.
He served as President of the American Orthopsychiatric Association (2010-2012) and President of the American Association of Social Psychiatry (2013-2015). He was the founding Chair, Work Group on Systems of Care (1994-2001), and Co-Chair, Committee on Diversity and Culture (2007-2015) in the AACAP; and Chair, Committee on Hispanic Psychiatrists (2006-2009) of the APA. He has over 220 scientific publications, published over 250 abstracts, edited three textbooks and four journal special issues.
Dr. Pumariega has received numerous awards, including the APA's Simon Bolivar Award and Lecture in Hispanic Psychiatry (2004), and the AACAP's Jeanne Spurlock Award and Lecture on Diversity and Culture (2007).