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The old adage that it is better to go upstream to find out why people are falling into the river, rather than continuing to rescue them as they float by, has not been the focus of counseling with the Inupiat people of northern Alaska despite the increasing rates of suicide, alcoholism, and depression among Alaska Natives. In 1994, the Anchorage Daily News referred to a new study relating to accidents, homicides, and suicides in Alaska. The study, which covered a ten-year period (1980 to 1990), was released by the University of Alaska’s Institute of Social and Economic Research (Berman & Leisk, 1994). The findings showed that Alaska Natives are more. | COUNSELING THE INUPIAT ESKIMO Catherine Swan Reimer GREENWOOD PRESS COUNSELING THE INUPIAT ESKIMO Recent Titles in Contributions in Psychology Modern Perspectives on John B. Watson and Classical Behaviorism James T. Todd and Edward K. Morris editors Worlds of Common Sense Equality Identity and Two Modes of Impulse Management Pauline Nichols Pepinsky The Five Stages of Culture Shock Critical Incidents Around the World Paul Pedersen Modern Perspectives on B. F. Skinner and Contemporary Behaviorism James T. Todd and Edward K. Morris editors Chaos Theory in Psychology Frederick David Abraham and Albert R. Gilgen editors Classifying Reactions to Wrongdoing R. Murray Thomas Prevent Repent Reform Revenge A Study in Adolescent Moral Development Ann C. Diver-Stamnes and R. Murray Thomas Post-Soviet Perspectives on Russian Psychology Vera Koltsova Yuri Oleinik Albert R. Gilgen and Carol K. Gilgen editors Multicultural Counseling in a Divided and Traumatized Society Joyce Hickson and Susan Kriegler Cognitive Psychology in the Middle Ages Simon Kemp Adolescence Biological and Psychosocial Perspectives Benjamin B. Wolman Soviet and American Psychology During World War II Albert R. Gilgen Carol K. Gilgen Vera A. Koltsova and Yuri N. .