Full Description
Broaching Race, Ethnicity, and Culture During the Counseling Process identifies practical strategies and tools that help mental health providers facilitate discussions with their clients about the extent to which issues related to race, ethnicity, and culture impact their presenting concerns.
Broaching refers to a counseling approach in which the mental health provider discusses the contextual dimensions of race, ethnicity, and culture during the counseling process. This book provides a conceptual framework and an empirically supported set of strategies for helping mental health providers skillfully navigate conversations that support clients in their exploration and examination about how issues of race, ethnicity, and culture may intrude upon their sociocultural and sociopolitical realities. Each chapter provides a detailed discussion of a specific component of the broaching framework, a review of relevant research that provides evidentiary warrants supporting the model, guidance about implementing the broaching model, case examples to illustrate how the broaching process can unfold, provider-client broaching dialogues, along with a set of discussion questions to support continued learning and skill development.
Drawing on the theoretical and empirical multicultural counseling literature, this groundbreaking text integrates and synthesizes the existing broaching literature in ways that render the process of discussing race, ethnicity, and culture more concrete.
Contents
1. Introduction: What Exactly Is Broaching and Why Is It Important? 2. Foundational Concepts that Support the Broaching Framework 3. Continuum of Broaching Behavior 4. Multidimensional Model of Broaching Behavior 5. Intra-Individual Broaching Dimensions 6. Intra-Racial-Ethnic, and -Cultural Broaching Dimensions 7. Inter-REC Broaching Dimensions 8. Strategies for Broaching the Subjects of Race, Ethnicity, and Culture 9. Preparation and Delivery Stage of Broaching Statement 10. Cultural Ruptures



