Islamically Integrated Psychotherapy

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Abnormal psychology
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Clinical assessment
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counseling
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Prophet Muhammad
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781599475813
  • Weight: 399g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 203mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Apr 2020
  • Publisher: Templeton Foundation Press,U.S.
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Integrating the Islamic faith with modern psychotherapy is at the forefront of the spiritually integrated psychotherapy movement. To bring this work to wider attention and to promote its continuation, Dr. Carrie York Al-Karam has brought together the present volume of nine essays, each of which is written by a Muslim clinician who practices Islamically integrated psychotherapy (IIP)-a modern approach that unites the teachings, principles, and interventions of the faith with Western therapeutic approaches.

As delineated in the Introduction, IIP has emerged from a variety of domains including the psychology of religion and spirituality, multicultural psychology and counseling, transpersonal psychology, Muslim Mental Health, and Islamic Psychology. The individual chapters then describe a variety of ways IIP is practiced by Muslim clinicians in their service provision with Muslim clients.

The contributors discuss a wide range of topics, such as how Islam can be viewed as a system for psychological wellbeing, or a “science of the soul”; what marital counseling can look like from an Islamically-integrated perspective; Prophet Mohammed as a psycho-spiritual exemplar in a new approach called The HEART Method; the use of Quranic stories in family therapy; as well as using Islamic teachings when working with Muslim children and adolescents.

A description of the various approaches is supplemented with discussions of their theoretical underpinnings as well as research-based recommendations for advancing clinical application. What emerges is a vital resource for Muslim and non-Muslim clinicians alike as well as the lay Muslim reader wanting to know more about how the Islamic faith and psychotherapy are engaging with each other in a modern clinical context.

Carrie York Al-Karam, PhD is president of the Alkaram Institute, a non-profit research and educational institution dedicated to advancing Islamic psychology to benefit society and improve lives. Her areas of expertise are Islamic psychology, spiritually integrated psychotherapy, and virtue/character development. Her books include Mental Health and Psychological Practice in the United Arab Emirates and Maya and the Seven Limbs. She currently resides in Roanoke, Virginia with her family.