Leader Kaleidoscope for Multicultural Supervisors: Supporting Our Teams | Recorded Webinar

Colorful kaleidoscope art image

ABOUT THIS RESOURCE

This webinar is intended for supervisors of behavioral health/mental health providers and focuses on the diversity of mental health providers from their race, age, sex, gender, sexual orientation, class, and other "-isms" that break the community apart. Social worker and LGBTQ activist Aleks Martin leads the discussion and offers a lens of compassion and understanding, and challenge our socially conditioned approaches to our practices not just with our clients, but with our fellow professionals. Topics addressed include:

  • supporting a diverse team as an ally
  • implicit bias
  • power dynamics

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

 

References

Collins, P. H. (1990). Black feminist thought in the matrix of domination. Black feminist thought: Knowledge, consciousness, and the politics of empowerment, 138(1990), 221-238.

Crenshaw, K. (1989). Demarginalizing the intersection of race and sex: A black feminist critique of antidiscrimination doctrine, feminist theory and antiracist politics. u. Chi. Legal f., 139.

Crenshaw, K. (1990). Mapping the margins: Intersectionality, identity politics, and violence against women of color. Stan. L. Rev., 43, 1241.

DiAngelo, Robin. Antiracist checklist.

Gouws, A. (2017). Feminist intersectionality and the matrix of domination in South Africa. Agenda, 31(1), 19-27.

Ruhl, Charlotte. Implicit or Unconscious Bias. Simply Psychology, published July 1, 2020.

 


FACILITATOR

Aleks Martin, MSW, LSWAIC, SUDP

Snowy house, image via Aleks Martin

Aleks Martin (S/he pronouns, but they is ok) has been in the health and social service field for over 20 years. Aleks was drawn to the LGBTQI2+ community in their mid-twenties working for a national HIV-prevention study with youth called, Young Asian Men’s Study (YAMS). This exposed them to the great work of HIV workers from other organizations and how community-based programs are critical in reaching out to the most vulnerable populations. During this time, they worked as a Disease Intervention Specialist with Public Health - Seattle & King County for 7 years, including working on the pilot study for the Rapid HIV Test Kit (then a 20-minute test).

A big portion of their professional career was spent at Seattle Counseling Service, a behavioral health agency for the LGBTQ community. From 2003 to 2019, Aleks started as Database Manager, Health Educator, Program Coordinator to Chemical Dependency Counselor and Addictions Program Supervisor. This was the safe space where their yearning for higher education was cultivated so they could serve their community further.

As a graduate of the University of Washington’s School of Social Work - Masters Program, Aleks developed their skills as a mental health clinician and social justice advocate. Aleks’ perspectives were shifted and allowed them to have a wider lens for diversity, inclusion and equity.

Aleks was inspired to start a private practice to address the special needs of the LGBTQI2+ and BBIPOC (Black, Brown, Indigenous and People of Color), particularly Queer and Trans Asian and Pacific Islander people dealing with unique and special issues that intersect with race/culture and gender/sexuality like coming out, spiritual conflicts, cultural dissonance, gender transition, social navigation at work and other environments, interpersonal relationships from intimacy to friendships, understanding relationships with non-LGBTQI2+ partner(s), and so on.


Terms of use and Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) disclosure statement

Published
April 28, 2022
Developed by
Language(s)
english
External Link
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