“…Encouraging counseling professionals to help build cultures of peace is also congruent with recent (Kiselica & Robinson, 2001;Lee, 1998) and earlier publications arguing that counselors should become more involved in social action and justice. In fact, in a 1987 issue of Counseling and Values, "Carl R. Rogers and the Person-Centered Approach to Peace," a number of authors (e.g., Ibrahim, 1987;Rogers, 1987aRogers, , 1987b) made a similar plea. It is interesting that Rogers reported on his 1948 publication, Dealing With Social Tensions: A Presentation of Client-Centered Counseling as a Means of Handling Interpersonal Conflicts, and his later successful efforts with his colleagues to resolve large scale conflicts in South Africa, Northern Ireland, Hungary, Spain, Brazil, Central America, and the former Soviet Union.…”