Talk, Touch & Listen While Combing Hair(c)
Buch, Englisch, 267 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 464 g
ISBN: 978-3-030-83728-0
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Social workers and Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health (IECMH) helpers need practical, relationship-based clinical tools to support families experiencing stress, separation, and loss. Research reveals key parenting behaviors occur during hair combing interaction (HCI) – lively verbal interaction, sensitive touch, and responsiveness to infant cues. This book explores how the simple routine of combing hair serves as an emotionally powerful, trauma-informed, culturally valid therapeutic tool for use by mental health helpers.
HCI offers a low-cost opportunity for IECMH helpers to engage families and sustain attachment relationships. In this book, case studies illustrate the use of HCI with diverse families of color. Each chapter includes questions for reflective supervision to understand sociocultural factors that may shape behaviors during HCI. Topics included in the text:- The Observing Professional and the Parent’s Ethnobiography
- Introduction to Reflective Supervision: Through the Lens of Culture, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
- A Case Study in Cross-Racial Practice and Supervision: Reflections in Black and White
- Tools to Disrupt Legacies of Colorism: Perceptions, Emotions, and Stories of Childhood Racial Features
Therapeutic Cultural Routines to Build Family Relationships: Talk, Touch & Listen While Combing Hair© is a unique resource for counselors, psychologists, psychiatrists, home visiting nurses, early childhood educators, and family therapists who work with military families or multiracial families with bi-racial children.
“This book provides practical insights useful for professionals and parents. The authors share compelling experiences using strength-based and rich cultural approaches guided by reflective practice. It deserves to be widely read and become a classic resource.”
Robert N. Emde, Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry, University of Colorado School of Medicine
Zielgruppe
Professional/practitioner
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie | Soziale Arbeit Soziale Gruppen/Soziale Themen Soziale Fragen & Probleme
- Rechtswissenschaften Strafrecht Kriminologie, Strafverfolgung
- Sozialwissenschaften Psychologie Psychotherapie / Klinische Psychologie Familientherapie, Paartherapie, Gruppentherapie
- Interdisziplinäres Wissenschaften Wissenschaft und Gesellschaft | Kulturwissenschaften Kulturwissenschaften
Weitere Infos & Material
Front matter
ENDORSEMENTS
FOREWORD
PREFACEACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ABOUT THE BOOK
EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS
SANKOFA
Body matter
PART I: Talk, Touch & Listen While Combing Hair
1. Childhood Experiences of Racial Acceptance and Rejection
2. A Social Worker’s Story: How Can I Help This Young Mother and Her Little Children?
3. The Interactive Stages of Hair Combing: Routines and Rituals
4. The Observing Professional and the Parent’s Ethnobiography
5. Cultural Routines and Reflections: Building Parent-Child Connections – Hair Combing Interaction as a Cultural Intervention
PART II: Reflective Supervision and Practice: Experiences Shared by Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health Practitioners
6. Introduction to Reflective Supervision: Through the Lens of Culture, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion7. Summoning Angels in the Nursery with Hair Combing Interactions
8. The Tilted Room of Colorism
9. Infant Mental Health Practice and Reflective Supervision: Who We Are Matters
10. A Case Study in Cross-Racial Practice and Supervision: Reflections in Black and White
PART III: Reflections on Community-Based Interventions
11. If Her Hair Isn’t Right, then I’m Not a Good Mother: Reflections on the San Diego Caregiver-Child Connections Community Counseling Project12. Reflections on the Talk, Touch & Listen Facilitator Learning Community: Braiding the Personal, the Professional, and Liberation
13. PsychoHairapy Through Beauticians and Barbershops: The Healing Relational Triad of Black Hair Care Professionals, Mothers, and Daughters
14. Reflections on Experiences in a Community-Based Parent Support Group: Parent Whisperers
15. Culture, Creativity, and Helping: Using the Afrocentric Perspective in Community Healing
PART IV: Tools for Observation, Assessment, and Intervention
16. Tools to Disrupt Legacies of Colorism: Perceptions, Emotions, and Stories of Childhood Racial Features
17. Guidelines to Identify Child-Endangering Hair Styling Practices: Medical, Legal, and Psychosocial Perspectives
18. Conclusions
Back matter
Appendix A: Glossary of Hair Combing Interaction Terms
Appendix B: Childhood Experiences of Racial Acceptance and Rejection (CERAR) Interview Questions & FAMILY COLORGRAM
Appendix C: Tender-Headed Rating Scale (TRS)
Appendix D: The ‘Neck-Up’ Exercise
Index




