Abstract

Since the concept of cultural adaptations of evidence-based treatments was introduced in the 1990s, it has been dismissed by some as unnecessary, unfeasible, and inconsistent with the tenets of methodologically rigorous interventions. Guillermo Bernal and Melanie Domenech Rodriguez address many of these critiques, providing a compelling rationale for cultural adaptation in their edited volume Cultural Adaptations: Tools for Evidence-Based Practice With Diverse Populations. Collectively, the work showcased in this volume represents some of the most innovative and exciting studies that can be found at the intersection of intervention research and multicultural psychology.

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