culture: key historical events Flashcards
• 1962—
C. Gilbert Wrenn authors The Culturally Encapsulated Counselor.
• 1970s—
William Cross, Jr., develops one of the first racial identity development models, the Cross Nigrescence Model.
• 1990s—
Janet Helms edits Black and White Racial Identity: Theory, Research and Practice. This book and subsequent research make significant strides in cultural identity development research.
• 1991—(ACA)
The ACA (known then as the American Association of Counseling and Development) approves the multicultural counseling competency standards (see Section 2.1.3 for more information).
• 1991 (Pedersen)—
Paul Pedersen labels multiculturalism as the “fourth force” in counseling, moving to center stage the importance of culture in counseling. This force follows the three forces of psychodynamic, (cognitive-) behaviorism, and humanism-existentialism.
• 1992—
The Multicultural Counseling Competency standards are published concurrently in the Journal of Counseling & Development and the Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development.
• 1996—
Patricia Arredondo and colleagues operationalize the 31 multicultural counseling competency standards in a seminal article (see Arredondo, Toporek, Brown, Jones, Locke, Sanchez, & Stadler, 1996).
• 2001—
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (USDHHS, 2001) publishes the Surgeon General’s Report (Mental Health: Culture, Race and Ethnicity—A Supplement to Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General) that highlights significant research related to how race and ethnicity (and associated oppression and resiliency experiences) influence mental health outcomes.
• 2003—
The Advocacy Competencies are approved by the American Counseling Association (Lewis, Arnold, House, & Toporek, 2003).
• 2004—
Manivong Ratts and colleagues (Ratts, D’Andrea, & Arredondo, 2004) label social advocacy as the “fifth force” of counseling.
• 2005—
The ACA Code of Ethics is revised to include a greater emphasis on culture.
• 2014—
The ACA Code of Ethics is revised again to more explicitly direct counselors toward multicultural counseling competency.
• 2015—
The Multicultural and Social Justice Counseling Competencies (Ratts, Singh, Nassar-McMillan, Butler, & McCullough, 2015) are developed, expanding the 1992 Multicultural Counseling Competency standards to speak more in-depth to social justice praxis and advocacy interventions.