ABSTRACT

Family Therapy with Muslims is the first guide for mental health professionals who work with Muslims in the family therapy setting. The book opens with a section defining the similarities across Muslim cultures, the effects of postcolonialism on Muslims, and typical Muslim family dynamics. The author then devotes a chapter to different models of family therapy and how they can specifically be applied to working with Muslim families. Case studies throughout the book involve families of many different backgrounds living in the West—including both immigrant and second generation families—that will give professionals concrete tools to work with clients of their own.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part |63 pages

Muslim Spiritual, Social, Family, and Political History

chapter |7 pages

Muslim Beliefs

chapter |39 pages

Muslim Countries

chapter |6 pages

The Impact of Colonialism

chapter |10 pages

Gender and Power

part |116 pages

Family Therapy Theories

chapter |24 pages

Family Therapy Assessment

chapter |17 pages

Structural Family Therapy

chapter |18 pages

Bowenian Family Therapy

chapter |13 pages

Experiential Family Therapy

chapter |9 pages

Narrative Family Therapy

chapter |12 pages

Contextual Family Therapy

chapter |10 pages

Feminist Family Therapy

chapter |12 pages

Post-Modern Family Therapy