Title

The “Silence” of Women in Integration: Exploratory Qualitative Research

School/Department

Rosemead School of Psychology

Publication Date

6-1-1997

Abstract

Whether the result of biology, the result of culture, or the interaction of both, modern research on gender concurs: men and women are different. This deceptively simple finding raises a series of interesting questions for work in the integration of psychology and theology. Do women think of integration differently than men? Does the impact of being a mother affect how women imagine integration? And is traditional integrative literature congenial with women's perceptions? If not, why aren't there more women writing on integration in ways that highlight their unique contributions? How are we to account for women's apparent silence when it comes to integration? The present study investigated these questions via exploratory qualitative research.

Publication Title

Journal of Psychology and Theology

Volume

25

Issue

2

First Page

188

Last Page

198

DOI of Published Version

10.1177/009164719702500203

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