2024
Fish, J., Ansloos, J., O’Keefe, V. M., & Gone, J. P. (2024). Truth and reconciliation for whom? Transitional justice for Indigenous Peoples in American psychology. American Psychologist, 79(4), 618-630.
Nagata, D. K., Kim, J. H. J., & Gone, J. P. (2024). Intergenerational transmission of ethnoracial historical trauma in the United States. Annual Review of Clinical Psychology, 20, 175-200.
*Kjerland, T. M., Schroeder, S., Tofaeono, V., Walls, M., & Gone, J. P. (2024). Increased community engagement of Indigenous Peoples in dementia research leads to higher context relevance of results. Dementia, 23(4), 643-668.
Crowe, N., Walls, M., Oberstar, V., Gone, J. P., Kitto, M., Bernu, C., & Weiss, N. M. (2024). Indigenous perspectives on strengths, resilience, and well-being. International Journal of Indigenous Health, 19(1), 1-23.
Jones, D. S., Hammonds, E., Gone, J. P., & Williams, D. (2024). Explaining health inequities – The enduring legacy of historical biases. New England Journal of Medicine, 390(5), 389-395.
Gone, J. P. (2024). Suicide in U.S. Indigenous persons: Reframing the etiology and solutions. Annals of Internal Medicine, 177(1), 97-98.
Jones, D. S., Abdalla, M., & Gone, J. P. (2024). Indigenous Americans – The Journal’s historical “Indian Problem.” New England Journal of Medicine, 390(1), 1-7.
Gone, J. P., Neville, H., Huang, L. N., Chang, D. F., & Bryant, L. L. (2024). Leadership, impact, and institutional change: A community conversation. In D. F. Chang & L. L. Bryant (Eds.), Transforming careers in mental health for BIPOC: Strategies to promote healing and social change (pp. 297-312). New York: Routledge.
Fish, J., & Gone, J. P. (2024). Beyond decolonization: Anticolonial methodologies for Indigenous futurity in psychological research. In L. Comas-Díaz, H. Y. Adames, & N. Y. Chavez-Dueñas (Eds.), Decolonial psychology: Toward anticolonial theories, research, training, and practice (pp. 119-141). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Gone, J. P. (2024). Foreword. In E. Hightower (ed.), Native American psychosocial identity (pp. xvi-xviii). San Diego: Cognella.