Getting to the Root of the Problem: Supporting Clients With Lived-Experiences of Systemic Discrimination

Author:

Bartlett Amy1ORCID,Faber Sonya2,Williams Monnica23ORCID,Saxberg Kellen2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Classics & Religious Studies, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada

2. School of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada

3. Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada

Abstract

For many marginalized people, coping with discrimination is not a temporary condition. Rather it is endemic to living in a discriminatory society and a source of ongoing stress. In this paper, we explore the need to provide people struggling to cope with the skills to tackle not just the personal consequences of discrimination, but also to understand and address the root causes of their pain, and specifically the ones that lie outside of themselves. We propose using the concept of social capital to bring greater awareness among clients, clinicians, and society in general about the need to pair the treatment of personal distress with concurrent practices to understand and tackle larger systemic issues impacting their mental health. People with marginalized identities are often expected to find ways to cope with oppression and then sent back into a broken world, perhaps with stronger coping skills, but often ones which do not address the root cause or source of the pain, which is social injustice. We propose that it is therapeutically important to problematize, pathologize and address the systems and narratives that discriminate and cause people to need to cope, instead of focusing therapeutic interventions only on the internal resources of the person doing the coping.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology

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