Even when therapy is “trauma-informed,” it rarely focuses on the impact of race-based oppression and microaggressions and the pervasive impacts from these experiences.
Join Kenneth V. Hardy, PhD, author of the new book Racial Trauma: Clinical Strategies & Techniques for Healing Invisible Wounds, alongside Networker’s director Zach Taylor to learn racially-sensitive, trauma-informed interventions and strategies that centralize race and racial oppression in every facet of the therapeutic process and relationship.
Kenneth V. Hardy
Kenneth V. Hardy, PhD, is President of the Eikenberg Academy for Social Justice and Clinical and Organizational Consultant for the Eikenberg Institute for Relationships in NYC, as well as a former Professor of Family Therapy at both Syracuse University, NY, and Drexel University, PA. He’s also the author of Racial Trauma: Clinical Strategies and Techniques for Healing Invisible Wounds, and The Enduring, Invisible, and Ubiquitous Centrality of Whiteness, and editor of On Becoming a Racially Sensitive Therapist: Race and Clinical Practice.
Zachary Taylor
Zach Taylor, MA, LPC, is the former director of Psychotherapy Networker. He’s interviewed the field’s top experts and hosted the annual Psychotherapy Networker Symposium. Prior to his time at Psychotherapy Networker, he spent 10 years in practice specializing in anxiety and panic disorders.
