Spiritual Traditions

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).

Gone, J. P. (2011). The red road to wellness: Cultural reclamation in a Native First Nations community treatment center. American Journal of Community Psychology, 47(1-2), 187-202.

Gone, J. P. (2011). “I came to tell you of my life”: Narrative expositions of “mental health” in an American Indian community. In M. Aber, K. Maton, & E. Seidman (Eds.), Empowering settings and voices for social change (pp. 134-154). New York: Oxford University Press.

Gone, J. P. (2010). Psychotherapy and traditional healing for American Indians: Exploring the prospects for therapeutic integration. The Counseling Psychologist, 38(2), 166-235.

Anderson, J. D., & Gone, J. P. (2009). Native American religious traditions. In R. A. Shweder, T. R. Biddell, A. C. Dailey, S. D. Dixon, P. J. Miller, & J. Modell (Eds.), The child: An encyclopedic companion (pp. 670-672). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Gone, J. P. (2008). The Pisimweyapiy Counselling Centre: Paving the red road to wellness in northern Manitoba. In J. B. Waldram (Ed.), Aboriginal healing in Canada: Studies in therapeutic meaning and practice (pp. 131-203). Ottawa, Ontario: Aboriginal Healing Foundation.

Gone, J. P. (2007). “We never was happy living like a Whiteman”: Mental health disparities and the postcolonial predicament in American Indian communities. American Journal of Community Psychology, 40(3-4), 290-300.

Gone, J. P. (2006). “As if reviewing his life”: Bull Lodge’s narrative and the mediation of self-representation. American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 30(1), 67-86.

Gone, J. P., & *Alcántara, C. (2006). Traditional healing and suicide prevention in Native American communities. Unpublished report contracted by the Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research, NIH (Contract No. MI-60823).

Gone, J. P. (2004). Keeping culture in mind: Transforming academic training in professional psychology for Indian country. In D. A. Mihesuah & A. Cavender Wilson (Eds.), Indigenizing the academy: Transforming scholarship and empowering communities (pp. 124-142). Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.

Gone, J. P. (2001). Affect and its disorders in a northern Plains Indian community: Issues in cross-cultural discourse and diagnosis (Publication No. 3017084) [Doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]. ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global.