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A Brief History of International Psychology: Beginnings. First International Congress of Physiological PsychologyParis, France 1889Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920)190 doctoral students from 10 countriesPredominately European and North American. Main Question. How can Arab psychology strengthen its
 
                
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1. Arab Psychology in Global Context Uwe P. Gielen
Institute for International and Cross-Cultural Psychology
St. Francis College, New York City
Ramadan A. Ahmed
Kuwait University
 
2. A Brief History of International Psychology: Beginnings First International Congress of Physiological Psychology
Paris, France  1889
Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920)
190 doctoral students from 10 countries
Predominately European and North American 
3. Main Question 
How can Arab psychology strengthen its presence in the emerging global psychology movement while being of service to society? 
4. Response  The brief history of international psychological development
The state of global psychology
The state of Arab psychology 
Establishing an Institute of Arab Psychology
 
5. A Brief History of International Psychology: Post-WWII American Psychology becomes a scientific superpower
Monocultural in nature
Little awareness of developments elsewhere, even in Europe
English  THE language of communication 
6. A Brief History of International Psychology: Recent Developments Europe
300,000 estimated European Psychologists (Tikkanen, 2005)
European Federation of Psychologists Associations (EFPA)
31 countries represented
Professional licensing requirements 
7. A Brief History of International Psychology: Recent Developments 
South America
Large number of psychologists (140,000 licensed psychologists in Brazil alone)
Fairly limited impact in the international arena (rather weak scientific and academic base)
 
8. A Brief History of International Psychology: Recent Developments East Asia
Relatively fewer psychologists
Japan  20,000+
China 10,000+
More rigorous scientific inquiry than in South America?
Chinese Government: Psychology one of 18 scientific disciplines  for the 21st century	
 
9. Trends in Global Psychology Generally speaking, the richer the country, the more significant psychologys role
Other factors 
Education level
Modernization
In emerging countries, psychologists more often found in urban areas
 
10. Trends in Global Psychology Political and Cultural Factors
Left and right-wing totalitarian regimes have often restricted psychologists
Liberal Democratic Governments generally encourage adoption of psychology
Exceptions: Nazi Germany, Apartheid South Africa, (former) German Democratic Republic, Communist Cuba 
11. Trends in Global Psychology Psychology has still been able to prosper in a wide variety of settings
The Philippines
Communist Cuba
Formerly communist Russia
Theocratic state of Iran
Liberal and largely-secular Netherlands
racially heterogeneous Brazil 
12. The Tasks of Global Psychology The worldwide integration of psychological developments in a culturally sensitive way
The creation of a psychology that can contribute to a universal consciousness and sense of responsibility 
13. The Tasks of Global Psychology Meeting global challenges:
Cognitive-Emotional  the need for empathy and sociocultural role-taking
Moral  the use of principled ethical reasoning in an environment of conflicting perspectives and values
Practical  the scope of global challenges (i.e. overpopulation, global warming, differences in wealth and resources) 
14. Arab Psychology Where does Arab Psychology fit into the global picture?
Is Arab Psychology visible on the international stage?
Has psychology assumed an important role in the modernization of Arab nations?
How much is psychology contributing to the welfare of Arab societies and their members?
 
15. Arab Psychology - Publications Review of 2,500 publications (Ahmed & Gielen, 1998, 2008)
Bibliography of 5,000 publications (Ahmed, 2007)
Steady growth and expansion of psychology in the Arab world
Broad range of Arab studies being conducted in developmental, social, educational, cross-cultural, and abnormal-clinical psychology
Minimal studies in animal, physiological, and experimental psychology 
16. Arab Psychology - Publications Review of # of published studies in PsycINFO in 114 developing countries over a 5-year period (Snchez-Sosa & Riveros, 2007) 
Large variation in research productivity between Arab countries
Some countries like Jordan, Iraq, and Egypt have global visibility comparable to many South American and Asian countries
Not fully representative - any studies published in languages other than English not counted 
17. Arab Psychology - Publications Research Activity by Psychologists in 19 Countries of the Middle East and North Africa
Country		               Number of Studies Listed in PsycINFO
________________________________________________________________________
Jordan 		               138
Iraq 			98
Egypt 			92
UAE 			78
Kuwait 		 	77
Lebanon 		 	73
Saudi Arabia 		63
Morocco 		 	40
Oman 			25
Sudan 			19
Bahrain 		 	17
Syria 			15
Algeria 		 	13
Somalia 		 	13
Tunisia 		 	12
Qatar 			10
Yemen 		 	10
Libya 			  3
Djibouti 		  	  2
________________________________________________________________________
Total 		               798
________________________________________________________________________
Note: The information in this table is taken from Snchez-Sosa and Riveros (2007, Table 4.5B). 
18. Arab Psychology - Publications Research Activity by Psychologists in 21 Developing Countries and the Arab World
Country/Region			Number of Studies Listed in PsycINFO
________________________________________________________________________
China 				 1917
India 				  835
Brazil 				  812
19 Arab countries combined 	                   798
South Africa 			  738
Mexico 				  733
South Korea 			  550
Thailand 				  222
Nigeria 				  214
Argentina 				  210
Chile 				  160
Uganda 				  156
Kenya 				  155
Jordan 				  138
Malaysia  				  136
Philippines 				  118
Tanzania 				  118
Ghana 				  114
Indonesia 				  112
Pakistan 				  109
Colombia 				  107
Bangladesh 			  103
________________________________________________________________________
Note: This table includes only those countries for which PsycINFO listed at least 100 studies for a 
5-year period.  All data reported are derived from Snchez-Sosa and Riveros (2007, Tables 4.1-4.6C). 
19. Arab Psychology  International Conferences December 2003 - First Middle East and North Africa Regional Conference of Psychology, Dubai, United Arab Emerites
Participants from 35 countries including 17 neighboring states
April/May 2007 - Second Middle East and North Africa Regional Conference in in Amman, Jordan
Participants from 28 countries including 15 countries in the Middle East and North Africa region (Knowles & Sabourin, 2008) 
20. Arab Psychology  International Conferences Kuwait University: Three International Conferences in the Social Sciences and Interdisciplinary Studies (Third Conference: December 2006) 
21. Arab Psychology  Limitations Most Arab studies conducted by a single researcher, imitative of Western studies, and tool-oriented rather than problem-centered (Soueif, 1998) 
Arab psychologists have not sufficiently indigenized their theories and research programs 
22. Arab Psychology  Limitations 
Arab psychologists have not developed original theoretical frameworks
Arab psychologists are not sufficiently visible in the global arena 
23. An Institute of Arab Psychology  A Modest Proposal A center for interdisciplinary cooperation in the context of joint research projects
A model for establishing a research culture based on collaboration between researchers from both Arab and non-Arab nations 
24. An Institute of Arab Psychology  A Modest Proposal A venue for organizing conferences, workshops, and courses in psychology
The institute should focus on scientific work and training of direct and indirect use to the surrounding society
 
25. An Institute of Arab Psychology  A Modest Proposal The Institute should include a library that contains books, articles, chapters, unpublished dissertations, masters theses, published and unpublished research reports, psychological tests, and other materials that are relevant to Arab psychologists 
26. An Institute of Arab Psychology  A Modest Proposal The Institute could publish a periodic Survey of Arab Psychology
The Institute should be fully integrated into a university setting while, at the same time, conducting its work on a relatively independent basis. Kuwait University is one such place where this may be possible 
27. Conclusions Psychology is prospering in many non-Western countries
The International Union of Psychological Science includes 71 national psychology associations on all inhabited continents
Psychology in many Arab countries, while steadily developing, has fallen behind in relation to some other economically, politically, and culturally emerging regions of the world, especially in East Asia and parts of Latin America. 
 
28. Conclusions The establishment of a financially well endowed, creatively led, and university-connected yet partially independent Institute for Arab Psychology would constitute a significant step toward making Arab psychology a more significant force in Global Psychology 
29. References  Ahmed, R. A. (2004). Psychology in Egypt. In M. J. Stevens & D. Wedding (Eds.), Handbook of international psychology (pp. 387-403). New York: Brunner-Routledge.
Ahmed, R. A., & Gielen, U. P. (Eds.).(1998). Psychology in the Arab countries. Menoufia, Egypt: Menoufia University Press.
Ahmed, R. A., & Gielen, U. P. (Eds.).(2008). Psychology in the Arab countries. Cairo, Egypt: Supreme Culture Council. (in Arabic)
Gielen, U. P. (in press). Arab psychology and the emerging global psychology movement. In A. Aksu-Koc & S. Bekman (Eds.), Perspectives on human development, family and culture. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. 
 
30. References Knowles, M., & Sabourin, M. (2008). Psychology and modern life challenges: The 2nd Middle East and North Africa regional conference of psychology, Amman, Jordan, 2007. International Journal of Psychology, 43 (2), 130-139.
Snchez-Sosa, J. J., & Riveros, A. (2007). Theory, research, and practice in Psychology in the developing (majority) world. In M. J. Stevens & U. P. Gielen (Eds.), Toward a global psychology: Theory, research, intervention, and pedagogy (pp. 101-146). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
 
31. Acknowledgements During 2002 and 2006 The first author was given the opportunity to visit the Psychology Department at Kuwait University as part of two invitations extended respectively by the College of Graduate Studies and the College of Social Sciences, in order to review the departmental graduate and undergraduate programs.  I am deeply grateful to the deans, administrators, and members of the Psychology Department for their warm hospitality and their openness with which they discussed the programs and the overall situation of the department during my two visits.  I am also indebted to Juris G. Draguns and Harold Takooshian for discussing with me their observations during our joint visit to Kuwait University in 2006.  This paper constitutes an attempt to extend and broaden my report to the College of Graduate Studies (Gielen, 2002) and the joint report by Professor Draguns (Pennsylvania State University) and I to the College of Social Sciences (Draguns & Gielen, 2006), by adding a few suggestions about how psychologists might contribute even further to the academic excellence of Kuwait University in the wider context of Arab psychology.