Culture & Way of Being - Unification of Three Cultures: Individualist, Collectivist, & First Peoples

This is a study about culture, about three different cultures, in fact. It is about how these cultures mix together, sometimes are at odds with each other, and how they come together in the context of my work as a counsellor. Although each person is a unique individual, the culture he or she grows u...

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Main Author: Aujla, Inderjit
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: City University of Seattle (CityU) 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11803/654
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spelling ftnatunivlajolla:oai:repository.nusystem.org:20.500.11803/654 2023-12-03T10:22:44+01:00 Culture & Way of Being - Unification of Three Cultures: Individualist, Collectivist, & First Peoples Aujla, Inderjit 2017-05-18 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11803/654 en eng City University of Seattle (CityU) http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11803/654 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/ culture and counseling Indo-Canadian culture collaborative therapy First Nations cultures culture and family Interpersonal relations and culture Cross-cultural counseling Thesis 2017 ftnatunivlajolla https://doi.org/20.500.11803/654 2023-11-05T17:18:36Z This is a study about culture, about three different cultures, in fact. It is about how these cultures mix together, sometimes are at odds with each other, and how they come together in the context of my work as a counsellor. Although each person is a unique individual, the culture he or she grows up in and is exposed to throughout life shapes the person's frame of reference, as well as his or her relationships in every aspect of life. Needless to say, as the centuries go by, the cultures in every part of the world evolve and change. This study is also about families, for these global changes impact family structures and the relationships within family structures. I explore family structures and functions in three different cultural contests: collectivist (India), individualist (modern Canadian), and the first peoples. Using a literature review methodology I explore how the values for relationships are at play within each culture. The significance of medicine wheel, collaborative therapeutic approaches, and the influence of the familial teachings are discussed as pertaining to culture and family. These approaches provide a foundation for a unique collaborative style of therapeutic interventions, with a focus on relationships, that I have learned to value in my practice. Thesis First Nations National University System Repository
institution Open Polar
collection National University System Repository
op_collection_id ftnatunivlajolla
language English
topic culture and counseling
Indo-Canadian culture
collaborative therapy
First Nations cultures
culture and family
Interpersonal relations and culture
Cross-cultural counseling
spellingShingle culture and counseling
Indo-Canadian culture
collaborative therapy
First Nations cultures
culture and family
Interpersonal relations and culture
Cross-cultural counseling
Aujla, Inderjit
Culture & Way of Being - Unification of Three Cultures: Individualist, Collectivist, & First Peoples
topic_facet culture and counseling
Indo-Canadian culture
collaborative therapy
First Nations cultures
culture and family
Interpersonal relations and culture
Cross-cultural counseling
description This is a study about culture, about three different cultures, in fact. It is about how these cultures mix together, sometimes are at odds with each other, and how they come together in the context of my work as a counsellor. Although each person is a unique individual, the culture he or she grows up in and is exposed to throughout life shapes the person's frame of reference, as well as his or her relationships in every aspect of life. Needless to say, as the centuries go by, the cultures in every part of the world evolve and change. This study is also about families, for these global changes impact family structures and the relationships within family structures. I explore family structures and functions in three different cultural contests: collectivist (India), individualist (modern Canadian), and the first peoples. Using a literature review methodology I explore how the values for relationships are at play within each culture. The significance of medicine wheel, collaborative therapeutic approaches, and the influence of the familial teachings are discussed as pertaining to culture and family. These approaches provide a foundation for a unique collaborative style of therapeutic interventions, with a focus on relationships, that I have learned to value in my practice.
format Thesis
author Aujla, Inderjit
author_facet Aujla, Inderjit
author_sort Aujla, Inderjit
title Culture & Way of Being - Unification of Three Cultures: Individualist, Collectivist, & First Peoples
title_short Culture & Way of Being - Unification of Three Cultures: Individualist, Collectivist, & First Peoples
title_full Culture & Way of Being - Unification of Three Cultures: Individualist, Collectivist, & First Peoples
title_fullStr Culture & Way of Being - Unification of Three Cultures: Individualist, Collectivist, & First Peoples
title_full_unstemmed Culture & Way of Being - Unification of Three Cultures: Individualist, Collectivist, & First Peoples
title_sort culture & way of being - unification of three cultures: individualist, collectivist, & first peoples
publisher City University of Seattle (CityU)
publishDate 2017
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11803/654
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11803/654
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States
openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11803/654
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