- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Psychology
Full Description
An affordable, practical, intersectional, research-based text on culturally-responsive therapy with nonreligious clients. While this frequently maligned and stigmatized demographic is one of the fastest growing in the country, graduate training programs seldom cover best practices for recognizing one's unrecognized biases and providing supportive, culturally-affirmative counseling for these clients, making the need for this comprehensive guide more essential for the field.
Contents
Table of Contents
Part I: Foundations
I. Introduction: Christian Hegemony & Western Approaches to Mental Health Care
II. The Rise of the Religiously Unaffiliated
III. Nones and Dones: Religious Exiting in Sociological Perspective
IV. Anti-Atheist Stigma & Christian Nationalism
V. Nonreligion, Well-Being, & Mental Health
Part II: Application
I. Race, Resistance, and Rejecting Religion: What Draws People of Color to Nonbelief in the United States?
II. Secular Sexual Minorities
III. Living in the Margins: Transgender and Gender Expansive Nonbelievers
IV. Leaving Religion, Leaving Patriarchy?
V. Sexuality & Secularity: The Influence of Purity Culture and Faith
VI. Counseling Nonreligious Clients Experiencing Grief
VII. Spiritual and Religious Abuse and Trauma Among Nonbelievers
VIII. Secularity and Substance Use Treatment
IX. Conclusion: Promoting Mental Health Among Nonbelievers: Revisiting Lessons and Future Directions