“Addressing key absences in the domains of both psychological assessment and community psychology, Macdonald offers a genuinely pathbreaking series of case studies and vignettes that enable us to re-conceptualize what psychological assessment and community psychology can become. This is a timely book, which, in its foregrounding of affirmative psychopolitical forms of agency, promises to re-energize and reinvigorate the field of a politically-aware community psychology.” (Derek Hook, Associate Professor of Psychology, Duquesne University, USA)
“Dr. Macdonald’s book is a very interesting deconstruction of the colonial discourse as a discourse of power as applied to the European-American psychological assessment tradition. Her book is of great interest for the clinician willing to enhance their cultural competence when practicing psychological assessment; for the scholar interested in social justice and oppression; and for the merely curious looking for an intellectually stimulating book on how assessing people’s minds can be contaminated by biases and prejudices in the evaluator’s own mind.” (Nicolae Dumitrascu, Clinical Testing Coordinator, Jesse Danielsen Institute, Boston University, USA)