
Contents
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Legal Status of the Discipline Legal Status of the Discipline
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Professional Associations Professional Associations
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Ethics Committees Ethics Committees
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Ethics Codes Ethics Codes
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Ethics Training Ethics Training
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Current Research on Psychological Ethics Current Research on Psychological Ethics
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Future Challenges for Psychological Ethics and Ethics Codes Future Challenges for Psychological Ethics and Ethics Codes
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Notes Notes
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References References
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23 North America: Canada and the United States
Get accessGerald P. Koocher, Associate Provost and Professor, Simmons College, Boston, MA
Thomas Hadjistavropoulas, Department of Psychology, University of Regina, Regina, Canada
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Published:21 November 2012
Cite
Abstract
Professional licensing and ethics codes of psychologists in the United States and Canada have very similar roots, but also many distinctive elements that represent regional and national jurisdictional differences and traditions. Each national psychological association has a distinctive ethics code with foundations in a strong national consensus. Both nations require substantial standardized educational and credential requirements as prerequisites for psychological practice. Few psychologists in the United States have any awareness of the International Union of Psychological Science or its relatively recent Universal Declaration of Ethical Principles, although many of the fundamentals of the Canadian code align more homogenously with that document.
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