Title: Introducing Addressing Hays 2001 Model of Addressing Diversity
1Introducing AddressingHays (2001) Model of
Addressing Diversity
- Axis VI or a Framework for Thinking About
Difference / Diversity
2Why the ADDRESS-ing Framework
- Goes beyond how to treat group X model
- Attends to the many complexities of each persons
identity (clients therapists) - Creates a paradigm for understanding the matrix
of diversity and difference
3Feminist-Multicultural Concepts (Brown, 1994
Kaschak, 1992 Root 1992)
- Culture may be defined as a framework of values
and beliefs, a means to organize experience. It
includes the rules by which interpersonal events
are perceived. Even private thought is conducted
in socially constructed language, and thus,
cannot be purely personal and self-contained. The
culture of the society in which one is raised and
lives defines what can and cannot be conscious
or, viewed slightly different, what must remain
unconscious. (Kaschak, 1992, p. 30)
4Multicultural Assessment Model Axis VI (Adopted
from Hays, 2001, p. 16)
- Cultural Influences
- Age generational influences
- Developmental and
- acquired disabilities
- Religion spiritual
- Orientation
- Ethnicity
- Socioeconomic status (SES)
- Target Groups
- Child, Adolescent, Elders
- People with
- Developmental/ acquired
- disabilities
- Religious target groups
- Ethnic target groups
- People of lower status, class,
- education, occupation,
- income, rural or urban
- habitat, family name
5Multicultural Assessment Model (Adopted from
Hays, 2001, p. 16)
- Cultural Influences
- Sexual Orientation
- Indigenous heritage
- National origin
- Gender
- Added
- Bi-cultural Identity
- College Education
- Target Groups
- Gay, lesbian, bisexual
- people
- Indigenous people
- Refugees, immigrants
- (legal/illegal), inter. students
- Women, transgender
- people
- Bicultural people (Assess
- language spoken at home)
- 1st, 1.5 or 2nd generation
- American- Self-identified
- 1st, 2nd generation in college
- or high school
6Multicultural Assessment Model (Adopted from
Hays, 2001, p. 16)
- If you are a member of more than one group
- you have a double, triple,fourfold, jeopardy,
- then the additive negative effect of
- oppression may manifest in your life,
- relationships, and self-perception or you may
- have developed resistance to parts or all of
- it
7What is stands for
- A Age related factors. Actual age and age
cohort (generation) - D Disability visible and invisible
disabilities - R Religion and spirituality
- E Ethnic identity race, culture (includes
people of color as well as Caucasian, white
ethnic)
8What it stands for
- S Socioeconomic Status current and former
especially in childhood - S Sexual orientation gay, lesbian, bisexual,
heterosexual, asexual, kinky and mono or
polygamous - I Indigenous heritage First nations peoples
- N National identity immigrants, refugees,
temporary residents, children of the same - Gender biological sex, transgender, gender
roles and stereotypes
9What does that all Mean
- A Age and generational influencesPeople are
not simply the age they are age in context of
personal, cultural, and world hx (also
chronological versus developmental age) - People are situated in their age cohort
- i.e., baby boomers, depression babies
- Thus we ask What does it mean for this person
to be this age, in this context, at this time in
the world, and to have been other ages at other
specific times in the world?
10Age and Generational Influences
- Answering these questions requires a knowledge of
hx - Specific culture
- Larger picture (country, world)
11Developmental Acquired Disabilities
- Some are born with disabilities developmental
- Some people loose their temporarily able-bodied
status during life acquired - Being a person with a disability means different
things depending on
12Developmental Disability
- Whether its developmental or acquired
- The cultural, social, hx contexts in which the
person lives - The politics of disability during the persons
lifetime - Impact of disability in functioning and on which
domain - Visible or invisible?
13Disabilities
- A language piece Speak of person with a
disability. The person is not disabled. The
person has a disability. - Something to think about Is being deaf a
disability status? Or a linguistic minority
status?
14R Religion and spirituality
- What is the place of religion and spirituality in
this persons life? What is their religious
identity? - For some people, religious beliefs also create a
culture? i.e., Jehovahs witness Islam or in
former times Roman Catholicism when religious and
political systems are merged - Is this a minority religion or mainstream
majority? Has that always been true for this
person in her life (i.e., were they born in a
Buddhist/Islam majority country and then moved
here)?
15Religion and Identity
- Is religion or spiritual practice important in
this persons identity? - I.E. in the pacific northwest (where I moved
from) many people are unaffiliated with organized
religion - This doesnt mean that spirituality is
unimportant however - How has the persons life/life experience/upbringi
ng be shaped by specific beliefs of their faith
or origin
16E Ethnic Identity
- Ethnicity may include race such as
African-American, Latina/o, Asian, Pacific
Islander, American Indian, Native Alaskan, Native
Hawaiian - People of self-identified mixed racial heritage
(remember race is a social construct, not all
people of mixed backgrounds will self-identify as
such) - White ethnicity (WASP, Irish, Italian, Armenian,
etc. - Americans
17Race Ethnicity??
- Race is a social construct
- People of different racial groups are, at the
level of genes, indistinguishable - Different societies code race and ethnicity
differently i.e., In America the one-drop
rule (see handout!)
18Race
- An arbitrary classification system of
populations conceived in Europe, using actual or
assumed genetic traits to classify populations of
the world into a hierarchical order, with
Europeans superior to all other (Christensen,
1989).
19Race
- The myth of human races constitutes one of mans
most damnable masses of misinformation, andhas
led to wars, strife, murder and waste of natural
resources (Calloway Harris, 1977).
20Race
- The idea that racial classifications correspond
to a reality or collection of characteristics has
not been demonstrated (Axelson, 1999)
21Evidence
- The human genetic code, or genome, is 99.9
percent identical throughout the world
22The Genesis of Race in the US
- 1444 European Slave Trade Begins
- 1660s Laws passed which prohibited marriage
between people of African descent and people of
European descent and made all Africans slaves for
life. - 1863 Emancipation Proclamation
- 1865 13 amendment
- 1978 Most recent racial classification system
from US government? - 2000 Census offers new choices
23Socioeconomic Status (SES)
- Social class great American invisible variable
- Because of possibility of upward/downward
mobility , people in North America can and do
change their social class status throughout their
lifetimes - A person has both a social class of origin, and
the one they currently occupy, may have passed
through others on their way to where they are now
24Social Class
- People who changed social class may hide their
origins - Social class maybe a combination of
- Money
- Education
- Attitudes and values
- Larger social context
- Context in which class is defined
- Class X ethnicity equation
25S Sexual Orientation
- Everyone has one
- Orientation the direction of ones desire. Its
not a lifestyle. - Mens orientations tend to be more fixed and
stable - Womens orientation tend to be less fixed, more
fluid
26Sexuality
- People express their orientation in various
configurations - Monogamous
- Polygamous
- Celibate
- The new stigmatized sexual minority (by
mainstream and LGB people) practitioners of
kink.
27I Indigenous Heritage
- Indigenous peoples in North America, and in
territories currently or formerly under US or
European control have been oppressed or made the
targets of genocide - Understanding indigenous heritage means a
thorough knowledge of the history of the
relationship of indigenous to colonizing groups
28N National Origin
- Where someone comes from, and how they or their
family got to the US - On purpose
- In fear
- In chains
- Legal or undocumented
- When someones family came here
- In relationship to what attitude towards their
particular immigrant group
29National Origin Issues
- How long ago s.o.s family came here
- Children/grandchildren of immigrants or refugees
may have a different relationship to their
national origin issues than those who came
centuries ago - Degree of attachment to country of origin Was/is
the language of origin spoken at home, in
worship, in cultural activities? Or was there
shame around it? Is home visited or inaccessible?
30G Gender
- Gender is the initial and one of the most
powerful organizers of human identity - Challenging issues
- Transgender in all of its variations
- Intersex
- Challenging the binary notions of sex and gender
- Gender is NOT the same as biological sex
31G Gender
- Sex the body, biology
- Gender how does a person enact their
relationship to that body and biology - Gender is a social construct which changes with
every other ADDRESS-ing variable
32Assumptions of Hays Model
- People do not have ONE identity
- Instead, our identity is constructed of various
factors multiple identities - Aspects of identity have different salience in
different social contexts - Observers will construct a persons identity
differently than persons construct themselves
33Assumptions of the model
- Identity will emerge in the dialectical struggle
between group memberships and individual sense of
self, temperament, and context identity may
construct differently depending upon a persons
reference group e.g. being I am because we
are is a different construction of identity than
I am me.
34An example of the complexity of identity
construction
- A person is
- White skinned
- Raised Methodist, now no affiliation
- Bisexual
- Monogamous
- Has Multiple Sclerosis
- Male
- Upper middle class currently, raised working
class a native English speaker - Forty years old
- Has a law degree
35TBC
- Keep the thought! Well talk about the
Address-ing Model assumptions more in detail next
week! - Also about the use of the words minority/majority
versus TARGET GROUP/ DOMINANT GROUP - For Today Case Presentation Dr. Schreier
- Entry into Personality Disorders
36References
- Hays, P. A. (2001). Addressing cultural
complexities in practice A framework for
clinicians and counselors. Washington, DC
American Psychological Association. - Brown, L.S. (2004). Class handouts and lecture
notes. Argosy University. Seattle. WA.