Complex Racial Trauma: Evidence, Theory, Assessment, and Treatment

Author:

Cénat Jude Mary123

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, University of Ottawa

2. Interdisciplinary Centre for Black Health, University of Ottawa

3. University of Ottawa Research on Black Health, University of Ottawa

Abstract

Racial trauma refers to experiences related to threats, prejudices, harm, shame, humiliation, and guilt associated with various types of racial discrimination, either for direct victims or witnesses. In North American, European, and colonial zeitgeist societies, Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) experience racial microaggressions and interpersonal, institutional, and systemic racism on a repetitive, constant, inevitable, and cumulative basis. Although complex trauma differs from racial trauma in its origin, the consistency of racist victimization beyond childhood, and the internalized racism associated with it, strong similarities exist. Similar to complex trauma, racial trauma surrounds the victims’ life course and engenders consequences on their physical and mental health, behavior, cognition, relationships with others, self-concept, and social and economic life. There is no way to identify racial trauma other than through a life-course approach that captures the complex nature of individual, collective, historical, and intergenerational experiences of racism experienced by BIPOC communities in Western society. This article presents evidence for complex racial trauma (CoRT), a theoretical framework of CoRT, and guidelines for its assessment and treatment. Avenues for future research, intervention, and training are also presented.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Public Health Agency of Canada

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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