Social justice and advocacy have been characterized as foundational underpinnings in the history of career development practices. Despite the uptick of research synthesizing social justice, advocacy, and career development, theories centering social justice have distinctly focused on individual career development rather than identifying relationships as the driver for growth and change. Established in feminist philosophical underpinnings, relationalcultural theory (RCT) illuminates the importance of social justice, mutuality, and relationships that promote employees' authenticity and mental health. This article describes (a) an overview of RCT tenets; (b) the connection among RCT, career development, and wellness; and (c) a case example for application.
K E Y W O R D S feminism, mental health, relational-cultural theory, social justice, workplaceThe relationship among career development, counseling, and mental health has elicited a significant priority on multiculturalism and social justice and draws from its history on advocacy (Crucil & Amundson, 2017;Nassar-McMillan, 2014). In fact, both the American Counseling Association Code of Ethics (2014) and the National Career Development Association Code of Ethics (2015) underscore the importance of social justice in the professional identity of career counselors and practitioners. Due to this relationship, a multitude of career development interventions function primarily from approaches that augment elements of social justice and advocacy (Fickling et al., 2018;Pope et al., 2013). However, the prevailing use of theories in career development predominantly draws from a conglomeration of tenets and histories steeped in White, Eurocentric, patriarchal, and individualistic paradigms (Nassar-McMillan, 2014).