“A psychology of liberation is one whose primary focus is the communities we come from and create. Our collective history is as important as our individual history. A liberation psychology is more concerned with how structures of power shape and bind us than with the particular events of our individual childhoods. . . . a liberation psychology is more concerned with ways of creating communal healing and collective change.”
Starhawk. (1987:23). Truth or dare. San Francisco: Harper San Francisco.

