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Decolonizing Trauma Healing

Toward a Humble, Culturally Responsive Practice
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This book offers a critical examination of the field of trauma work using a decolonial lens, recentering narratives and approaches to healing in a more inclusive, culturally responsive way than that offered by dominant Eurocentric approaches. As trauma is a universal experience, a colonized paradigm for responding to trauma re-introduces problematic dynamics of domination and subjugation that are inimical to healing. Decolonizing Trauma Healing offers a new paradigm for how psychologists and other mental health providers can learn to properly understand and work with people whose lives, psyches, and souls have been damaged by exposure to trauma. Dr. Laura S. Brown introduces her decolonial, humble, culturally responsive (DHCR) model of trauma healing practice. It urges readers to abandon the concept of cultural competence and other approaches that maintain a Eurocentric perspective, in favor of a decolonial method that re-centers the sufferer's lived experience, with an understanding of the subtle ways in which the colonial mindset underlies the causes of trauma as well as our traditional conception of trauma healing. As a member of a colonized and marginalized culture, as well as in her work as a trauma healer, Dr. Brown serves as an inspiration for readers who want to understand why the traditional approach to trauma care has been insufficient, and all those who are ready to do the work needed to bring the field to a new level of clarity and rigor.
Laura S. Brown, PhD, ABPP, has practiced trauma work in Seattle, Washington, living on unceded Duwamish land, since 1976. A speaker and author on decolonial, liberatory, intersectional feminist therapy theory and practice, she offers workshops and trainings to professionals around the world as well as for the general public on such topics as trauma work, self-care for trauma workers, cultural responsivity, and the ethical challenges of this work. She is the past-president of the APA Division of Trauma Psychology.
Introduction: We Meet Again Chapter 1: The Decolonial Movement in Mental Health - And an Introduction to the DHCR Model Chapter 2: An Expansive Decolonial Paradigm for Trauma Chapter 3: Decolonizing Trauma Healing Chapter 4: Where We've Come From: The Heritage of Decolonial Healing Chapter 5: Decolonial Understandings of the Traumagenic Effects of Social Pathologies Chapter 6: Exploring Intersectional Identities in DHCR Trauma Healing Chapter 7: Decolonizing the Constructs and Myths of "Safety" Chapter 8: Decolonizing Myths of Safety Chapter 9: Stories of Unknowing and What Follows When We Know: Getting Closer to Safe Chapter 10: Intersectionalities and Trauma - Risk and Capacities in the Face of Social Pathologies and Relational Harm Chapter 11: Exploring and Decolonizing the Intersectional Identities of Suffering People Chapter 12: Criteria for a Decolonial, Humble, Culturally Responsive Practice of Trauma Healing: Making the Grade Chapter 13: Aren't There Already Some DHCR Trauma Healing Methodologies? And What Can We Learn from Them?
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