Challenging Mental Health Concerns among Black Caribbean Immigrants
The racial and ethnic diversity of the United States continues to evolve due to increases in immigration from nearly all parts of the globe, including the Caribbean region. Like the U.S., this region can also be considered a melting pot of cultures, with the Afro-Caribbean population widely scattere...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-569792020-09-29T05:36:07Z Challenging Mental Health Concerns among Black Caribbean Immigrants Venner, Heather Angela Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Welfare, Laura Everhart Bayne, Hannah Barnhill Pimentel, Peggy J. Bodenhorn, Nancy E. mental health counseling Black Caribbean immigrants racial and ethnic identity The racial and ethnic diversity of the United States continues to evolve due to increases in immigration from nearly all parts of the globe, including the Caribbean region. Like the U.S., this region can also be considered a melting pot of cultures, with the Afro-Caribbean population widely scattered across these island nations. Important to this investigation is the large diaspora population of Black Caribbean immigrants (BCs) in the U.S. who are often viewed as African American simply by virtue of their skin tone and facial features. As such, this racial consolidation does not take into account their distinct history, immigrant experiences, and cultural 'separateness,' particularly with respect to mental health counseling. Current research is limited as to how the racial and ethnic identities of various generations of Black Caribbean immigrants in the U.S have shaped their experiences—and especially how racism in American may be impacting their lives. Moreover, their already limited experience with the counseling process may be undermined by culturally-inappropriate services that do not consider their distinct cultural beliefs and needs. Guided by known and respected clinical standards for multicultural counseling and training for culturally-competent counseling, this qualitative study explored the counseling experiences of eight English-speaking BCs. Themes related to if and how mental health clinicians are actually addressing their racial distinctiveness, ethnic identity, and immigrant experiences were highlighted. Implications for counselors, counselor educators, and Black Caribbean immigrants were summarized. Ph. D. 2015-10-27T08:00:56Z 2015-10-27T08:00:56Z 2015-10-26 Dissertation vt_gsexam:6330 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/56979 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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mental health counseling Black Caribbean immigrants racial and ethnic identity |
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mental health counseling Black Caribbean immigrants racial and ethnic identity Venner, Heather Angela Challenging Mental Health Concerns among Black Caribbean Immigrants |
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The racial and ethnic diversity of the United States continues to evolve due to increases in immigration from nearly all parts of the globe, including the Caribbean region. Like the U.S., this region can also be considered a melting pot of cultures, with the Afro-Caribbean population widely scattered across these island nations. Important to this investigation is the large diaspora population of Black Caribbean immigrants (BCs) in the U.S. who are often viewed as African American simply by virtue of their skin tone and facial features. As such, this racial consolidation does not take into account their distinct history, immigrant experiences, and cultural 'separateness,' particularly with respect to mental health counseling. Current research is limited as to how the racial and ethnic identities of various generations of Black Caribbean immigrants in the U.S have shaped their experiences—and especially how racism in American may be impacting their lives. Moreover, their already limited experience with the counseling process may be undermined by culturally-inappropriate services that do not consider their distinct cultural beliefs and needs.
Guided by known and respected clinical standards for multicultural counseling and training for culturally-competent counseling, this qualitative study explored the counseling experiences of eight English-speaking BCs. Themes related to if and how mental health clinicians are actually addressing their racial distinctiveness, ethnic identity, and immigrant experiences were highlighted. Implications for counselors, counselor educators, and Black Caribbean immigrants were summarized. === Ph. D. |
author2 |
Educational Leadership and Policy Studies |
author_facet |
Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Venner, Heather Angela |
author |
Venner, Heather Angela |
author_sort |
Venner, Heather Angela |
title |
Challenging Mental Health Concerns among Black Caribbean Immigrants |
title_short |
Challenging Mental Health Concerns among Black Caribbean Immigrants |
title_full |
Challenging Mental Health Concerns among Black Caribbean Immigrants |
title_fullStr |
Challenging Mental Health Concerns among Black Caribbean Immigrants |
title_full_unstemmed |
Challenging Mental Health Concerns among Black Caribbean Immigrants |
title_sort |
challenging mental health concerns among black caribbean immigrants |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/56979 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT vennerheatherangela challengingmentalhealthconcernsamongblackcaribbeanimmigrants |
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