An Integrative Approach to Counseling
Bridging Chinese Thought, Evolutionary Theory, and Stress Management
- Robert G. Santee - Chaminade University of Honolulu
May 2007 | 296 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
An Integrative Approach to Counseling: Bridging Chinese Thought, Evolutionary Theory, and Stress Management offers a global and integrative approach to counseling that incorporates multiple concepts and techniques from both eastern and western perspectives. The book identifies commonalities rather than the differences between them. The book also compares and contrasts the underlying cultural assumptions of western counseling with those of the Chinese perspectives of Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism, relative to integrating and applying a more global approach to helping individuals functionally adapt to challenges in their environments. The book will be used by faculty and students in those advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in psychology, counseling, or social work that cover such areas as introduction to counseling, counseling skills and techniques, counseling theories, multi-cultural awareness and counseling, and stress management.
Series Editor's Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART I: FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES AND CONCEPTS
Ch 1: Evolutionary Theory and Evolutionary Psychology
Ch 2: Stress and the Stress Response
Ch 3: Stress Management
PART II: CULTURALLY DIVERESE APPROACHES TO MANAGING STRESS
Ch 4: Buddhism and Stress Management
Ch 5: Daoism and Stress Management
Ch 6: Confucianism and Stress Management
PART III: INTEGRATION AND APPLICATION OF CULTURALLY DIVERSE APPROACHES TO MANAGING STRESS
Ch 7: Underlying Cultural Assumptions
Ch 8: Rapport
Ch 9: Thinking
Ch 10: Feeling
Ch 11: Behaving
Ch 12: Interpersonal Relationships
Ch 13: Spirituality
Index
About the Author