Spiritual Traditions

30 publications

PDF copies of the articles, chapters, and reports listed below may be downloaded by clicking on my linked name within the citation (* indicates student/trainee co-authors).

*Pham, T. V, *Pomerville, A., *Burrage, R. L., & Gone, J. P. (2022). An interview-based evaluation of an Indigenous traditional spirituality program at an urban American Indian health clinic. Transcultural Psychiatry. Advance online publication.

Gone, J. P. (2023). Origins of antimining resistance in the life of a grassroots American Indian leader: Prospects for Indigenizing psychobiography. Journal of Personality, 91(1), 68-84.

Gone, J. P. (2022). Indigenous research methodologies: X-marks in the age of community accountability and protection. Qualitative Inquiry, 28(2), 164-170.

Gone, J. P. (2022). Re-imagining mental health services for American Indian communities: Centering Indigenous perspectives. American Journal of Community Psychology, 69(3-4), 257-268.

Gone, J. P. (2022). Four principles for cultivating Alternate Cultural Paradigms in psychology: Summary reflections on innovative contributions. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 62(4), 614-623.

Gone, J. P. (2021). Decolonization as methodological innovation in counseling psychology: Method, power, and process in reclaiming American Indian therapeutic traditions. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 68(3), 259-270.

Gone, J. P., Tuomi, A., & Fox, N. (2020).  The Urban American Indian Traditional Spirituality Program: Promoting Indigenous spiritual practices for health equity. American Journal of Community Psychology, 66(3-4), 279-289.

Gone, J. P. (2019). “The thing happened as he wished”: Recovering an American Indian cultural psychology. American Journal of Community Psychology, 64(1-2), 172-184.

*Pomerville, A., & Gone, J. P. (2019). Indigenous culture-as-treatment in the era of evidence-based mental health practice. In C. Fleming & M. Manning (Eds.), Routledge handbook of Indigenous wellbeing (pp. 237-247). New York: Routledge.

Gone, J. P. (2017).“It felt like violence”: Indigenous knowledge traditions and the postcolonial ethics of academic inquiry and community engagement. American Journal of Community Psychology, 60(3-4), 353-360.