The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of an Aboriginal approach to healing and to establish the theoretical grounds for its effectiveness. Toward this end, this paper considers a number of issues. First, the similarities and differences between various Euro-Western theories of counselling or psychotherapy1 and Aboriginal approaches to healing are examined. Second, an overview of major cumulative findings from research on psychotherapy is presented toward establishing major curative factors that are common across various therapy approaches. Third, related to these psychotherapy research findings, Jerome Frank's (1961, 1982, 1991) theory of common factors is reviewed toward establishing parallels betwee...
Indigenous people around the world have long healing traditions. Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres ...
The purpose of this study was to explore whether Indian counsellors and psychotherapists in the UK p...
There is a gap in the practice of psychotherapy that becomes clearly evident to non- Aboriginal psy...
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of an Aboriginal approach to healing and to esta...
There is revival in the use of traditional healing among Canadian Aboriginal communities and the the...
As with many Indigenous groups around the world, Aboriginal communities in Canada face significant c...
D.Litt. et Phil.Philosophies of health care in South Africa tend to be based on either the medical a...
A traditional aboriginal healing ceremony, called the Healing Circle, was utilized in a counselling ...
Introduction Health outcomes and life expectancy of Indigenous people throughout the world are far ...
An argument is made that the practice of psychotherapy would benefit from including a model of healt...
The release of the Bringing Them Home report in 1997 (National Inquiry into the Separation of Aborig...
Traditional medicine has been practiced by Aboriginal people for thousands of years at the community...
There is a gap in psychotherapy that becomes clearly evident to psychologists who treat Aboriginal c...
Multicultural advocates within professional psychology routinely call for “culturally competent ” co...
Euro-Canadian interventions have not successfully addressed the socio-economic problems experienced ...
Indigenous people around the world have long healing traditions. Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres ...
The purpose of this study was to explore whether Indian counsellors and psychotherapists in the UK p...
There is a gap in the practice of psychotherapy that becomes clearly evident to non- Aboriginal psy...
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of an Aboriginal approach to healing and to esta...
There is revival in the use of traditional healing among Canadian Aboriginal communities and the the...
As with many Indigenous groups around the world, Aboriginal communities in Canada face significant c...
D.Litt. et Phil.Philosophies of health care in South Africa tend to be based on either the medical a...
A traditional aboriginal healing ceremony, called the Healing Circle, was utilized in a counselling ...
Introduction Health outcomes and life expectancy of Indigenous people throughout the world are far ...
An argument is made that the practice of psychotherapy would benefit from including a model of healt...
The release of the Bringing Them Home report in 1997 (National Inquiry into the Separation of Aborig...
Traditional medicine has been practiced by Aboriginal people for thousands of years at the community...
There is a gap in psychotherapy that becomes clearly evident to psychologists who treat Aboriginal c...
Multicultural advocates within professional psychology routinely call for “culturally competent ” co...
Euro-Canadian interventions have not successfully addressed the socio-economic problems experienced ...
Indigenous people around the world have long healing traditions. Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres ...
The purpose of this study was to explore whether Indian counsellors and psychotherapists in the UK p...
There is a gap in the practice of psychotherapy that becomes clearly evident to non- Aboriginal psy...