Intersectionality Research in Counseling Psychology

This article introduces the special section on intersectionality research in counseling psychology. Across the 4 manuscripts that constitute this special section, a clear theme emerges: a need to return to the roots and politics of intersectionality. Importantly, the 2 empirical articles in this spe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of counseling psychology 2017-10, Vol.64 (5), p.453-457
Hauptverfasser: Grzanka, Patrick R., Santos, Carlos E., Moradi, Bonnie
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article introduces the special section on intersectionality research in counseling psychology. Across the 4 manuscripts that constitute this special section, a clear theme emerges: a need to return to the roots and politics of intersectionality. Importantly, the 2 empirical articles in this special section (Jerald, Cole, Ward, & Avery, 2017; Lewis, Williams, Peppers, & Gadson, 2017) are studies of Black women's experiences: a return, so to speak, to the subject positions and social locations from which intersectionality emanates. Shin et al. (2017) explore why this focus on Black feminist thought and social justice is so important by highlighting the persistent weaknesses in how much research published in leading counseling psychology journals has tended to use intersectionality as a way to talk about multiple identities, rather than as a framework for critiquing systemic, intersecting forms of oppression and privilege. Shin and colleagues also point to the possibilities intersectionality affords us when scholars realize the transformative potential of this critical framework. Answers to this call for transformative practices are foregrounded in Moradi and Grzanka's (2017) contribution, which surveys the interdisciplinary literature on intersectionality and presents a series of guidelines for using intersectionality responsibly. We close with a discussion of issues concerning the applications of intersectionality to counseling psychology research that spans beyond the contributions of each manuscript in this special section. Public Significance Statement This article introduces a special section of Journal of Counseling Psychology devoted to intersectionality, an important framework for studying and critiquing how interlocking systems of oppression (e.g., racism, sexism, heterosexism) shape experiences of social inequality.
ISSN:0022-0167
1939-2168
DOI:10.1037/cou0000237