ABSTRACT

This book analyses how practitioners can use psychotherapy as a healing mechanism, focusing on the intersection of gender, power, and social justice within the global context.

It begins by interrogating the concept of social justice itself before examining men's and women’s issues from biological, sociological, contextual, and ecological perspectives. Each chapter covers individual, couple, and family therapy as well as training and supervising for heterosexual and homosexual individuals from a social justice standpoint.

With a centered and balanced perspective about the impact of gender and power on men's and women's relationships to each other and their ecological contexts, Daneshpour aims to help mental health practitioners privilege client voices, promote justice in gendered relationships, and manage the impact of socio-political issues in therapeutic practice.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|15 pages

Gender, Nature, Nurture

chapter 2|15 pages

Masculinity in Global Contexts

chapter 3|17 pages

Women's Rights in Global Contexts

chapter 5|15 pages

Gender and Religion

chapter 6|20 pages

Gender and Politics

chapter 7|18 pages

Gender, Race, and Class

chapter 8|21 pages

Gender and War

chapter 9|20 pages

Gender and Violence

chapter 10|18 pages

Gender and Work

chapter 12|7 pages

Conclusion