NOTEWORTHY

Racial Justice

 

therapy talk

We owe it to ourselves, and to the families and communities we serve, to work for racial justice not just at the ballot box on election day, but in our everyday interactions. Our privilege gives us voice in the larger culture. Speaking up is one of the most important ways we can use our privilege. We can speak up to our friends and colleagues about the alarmingly high incarceration rate in our country, and the grossly disproportionate number of people of color who are currently in jail, and who are permanently stripped of voting rights because of their criminal records. We can actively discuss and oppose the high rates of Indigenous suicide, and violence against Indigenous women. We can pay attention to whether and how our elected officials oppose stop-and-frisk policies and racially based police brutality (and unpunished murder). We can take a public stand against exclusionary immigration policies. We can let our officials know by phone, by email, or in person that these issues matter to us. We can look for and act on opportunities to forge friendships with people of color, and we can see that our Black and Brown friends and colleagues are included and represented in all areas of our lives.

Source: Combs, G. (2019). White privilege: What’s a family therapist to do? Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 45(1), 61-75.


On the Web

Margins to Center: Cultural Connections among C/MFTs—increasing cultural competency in order to better serve diverse client populations.

Read it here

data note

Sources: “Police Killings of Unarmed Black Americans Affect Mental Health of Black Community,” Penn Medicine News, June 21, 2018.

U.S. Census Bureau, 2019.

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 2020.


Other articles

Gray Divorce: Splitting Up Later in Life
Special to this Issue

To the Class of 2020

Late one night before this was due, I paused for a
moment to process what the last two years have put me through.

Alejandra Franco, MA AAMFT Student member Class of 2020

Meaning of Aging in a Time of Crisis
Perspectives

Barriers to Incarcerated Parenting and How MFTs Can Help

Every year, about 1.9 million children in the United States have a parent in a state or federal prison (Davis & Shlafer, 2017). Alarmingly, children of incarcerated parents struggle with a variety of problems that could have implications on their adulthood lives.
Eman Tadros, PhD, and Melanie Barbini

Meaning of Aging in a Time of Crisis
Perspectives

How the Death of a Child Can Impact a Marriage

As our community copes with the emotional fallout of living through the COVID-19 pandemic, thousands of families are suffering from various forms of loss. Married couples are under more stress and strain due to the loss of a job, illness, or the death of a family member.
Debra Schoenberg, JD