Multicultural Counselling
Petre BOTNARIUC
Institute of Educational Sciences, Bucharest
History
The main stages of multicultural counselling are, according to Launikari and Puukari:
- The birth of multicultural counselling (in the 1950s). The awareness of
intercultural problems emerges in the 1950s when American counsellors begin to
consider the problems of African-Americans and other minorities affected by
segregation, racism and prejudice, principally aiming to “assimilate minorities
into the American society” (Copeland, 1983; Jackson, 1995, apud Launikari et
al., 2005). The first articles appear in the specialized literature on the way
counselling can take into account the cultural background of minority groups. - Early multicultural counselling (in the 1960s). In this period “the aims of
counselling begin to change from assimilating minorities to recognition and
appreciation of cultural differences” (Copeland, 1983, apud Launikari et al.,
2005). The stress falls on the counsellor’s availability to answer the client, and on
multicultural research to identify specific needs “of the culturally different /
disadvantaged” (Jackson, 1995, apud Launikari et al., 2005). - Crystallisation of multicultural aspects in counselling (1970s – 1980s). The
interest in multicultural counselling increases significantly in many countries
over the world. The limitations of traditional psychological instruments that was
culturally biased and not valid for other cultures than the dominant one are
highlighted. The accent shifts now on the entire counselling process, by including
multicultural modules in the initial counsellor training (Hills; Strozier, 1992,
apud Launikari et al., 2005).