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Early Career Panel Clinical Conference

  • 13 Sep 2025
  • 11:00 AM - 1:00 PM
  • Albertus Magnus & Zoom

Registration

(depends on selected options)

Base fee:
  • Board members
    Clinical Conference Chair
    Assistant to the Clinical Conference Chair
    Registrar
    CEU Coordinator


The Connecticut Society For Psychoanalytic Psychology

presents
Early Career Panel

Clinical Conference

The Cultural Third and the Uneven Gaze:

Supervision Between Non-BIPOC Supervisors and BIPOC Clinicians

Saturday September 13, 2025

Hybrid Event

In Person & Zoom


2 Continuing Education Credits

Conference Schedule

Coffee hour and in-person check-in 10-11

Zoom check-in 10:45

Presentation 11-1 

Lunch 1-2

Location

Albertus Magnus College

Behan Community Room, New Haven, CT

Directions and Photo


Map of Albertus Magnus College

2 CECs (Division 39) 

2 CECs,  Social Work, Pending approval LPCs & LMFTs 

A Zoom link will be sent to all registrants the day before the event.

The Talk

This panel discussion examines the complexities of positionality and power within supervisory relationships, particularly in cross-cultural and racial contexts. Drawing on culturally humble, strengths-based, and psychoanalytic frameworks, participants will explore how supervisory dynamics are shaped by racial identity, power, and the sociohistorical context of clinical training. Readings highlight the importance of self-reflection, humility, and the limitations of inclusion narratives when working with BIPOC supervisees. Participants will be invited to reconsider supervisory norms, engage critically with their own social locations, and consider how to foster accountability and mutuality without reinforcing hierarchical or extractive dynamics in supervision.  

Learning Objectives

By the end of this program, participants will be able to:  

• Identify and articulate their own positionality as supervisors and reflect on how it influences their clinical and supervisory relationships.  

• Recognize that the process of engaging with one’s positionality may not be shared or invited by BIPOC supervisees and explore the implications of this asymmetry in supervision.  

• Evaluate and apply strategies to address and reduce power differentials in supervision, particularly in cross-racial and cross-cultural supervisory dyads. 

Meet the Speakers


Dr. Jane E.M. Carter, PhD  is a Trinidadian and British clinical psychologist at Yale Health Center. She earned her Ph.D. from Texas A&M University and has worked in diverse settings across the U.S., U.K., and the Caribbean. Her clinical work focuses on serious mental illness, attachment, and identity-related trauma. Jane integrates psychodynamic, behavioral, and cognitive-behavioral approaches. Committed to socially conscious, recovery-oriented practice, she considers sociopolitical context and positionality essential to ethical care. Her presentation style is collaborative and grounded in experience, aiming to deepen understanding and support more effective, humane ways of helping people heal. 


Mia WilsonLCSW is an embedded mental health counselor at Yale Law School. She previously served both Yale Law and the Yale School of the Environment, transitioning fully to Yale Law in Spring 2023. Mia earned her BSW from Western Connecticut State University and her MSW from NYU’s accelerated program. Her approach integrates clinical and wellness-focused interventions, including ecotherapy, CBT, and trauma-informed care. With a background in nonprofit work supporting high-risk populations, Mia brings expertise in racial trauma, anxiety/OCD, and ADHD. She is passionate about holistic, affirming care that fosters resilience and sustainable well-being. 

Dr. Eva Wilson, PhD  is a counseling psychologist at Yale Health, serving as the lead embedded clinician for the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Eva earned her doctorate in counseling psychology from Boston College and completed her internship and postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania. She has worked in university and community mental health settings with adolescents and adults from diverse backgrounds. Eva specializes in racial identity development and racial trauma, ADHD and neurodiversity, and identity and relationship concerns. She integrates psychodynamic and relational-cultural approaches, bringing a strong social justice lens and strengths-based advocacy to her work with clients, particularly those from marginalized backgrounds.


Dr. Ellen Nasper, PhD is a clinical psychologist in private practice in New Haven and an Assistant Clinical Professor in the Yale School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry where she has taught an elective on the Consequences of Childhood Attachment Trauma since 2002. She received the Distinguished Faculty Award for her teaching for 2008-2009. Ellen worked for 26 years for the Connecticut Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, where she provided leadership in the development of trauma focused treatment and led the DMHAS Dialectical Behavior Therapy project from 1995 until 2000. From 2014 to 2022, she served as the Clinical Conference Chair for CSPP (APA Division 39 local chapter).  She is now the Coordinator of Educational Programs for CSPP.  She is the author of one book and several articles and has lectured at national conferences.

Recommended Readings:

   Participants 

The conference is appropriate for professionals interested in the practice of psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic psychotherapy. The instructional level of this conference is intermediate.

Continuing Education

This conference has been approved for for 2 continuing education credits by Div. 39. Division 39 maintains responsibility for this program and its content.

Pending approval - 2 CECs from NASW-CT.

If continuing education credit is desired, please mark the appropriate box on the registration page, for our records. In addition,100% attendance and a completed evaluation form is required to receive CEC certificates. The evaluation form will be sent in the form of an online survey to all registrants within a few hours after the event, and if you attend the full conference and return that you will be sent a certificate of attendance.

To Register and Pay

Members - remember to log in for member discount. 

If you do not log in, you won't be recognized as a member.

All registrations must be made and paid for online.

You can pay with credit card and debit card.

If you are using a phone, you will need to register through the WildApricot app, which is designed for phone use and will allow you all the options. The app Wild Apricot for Members is available in your App Store for free. Just log in with your usual CSPP email and password.

Refunds will be given in full until the Monday before the conference. To receive a refund, cancel your registration online by going to your profile in the upper right corner, select "My Event Registrations" click on the event, then click on "Cancel Reservation." Questions/problems, please contact the registrar, Monique St. Paul.

Scholarship registrants: If you need the registration code, contact William Hartmann, MFT.

Members and Contacts - Need to update your information?

Please login to your profile, then click under your name at View Profile, to make any changes or additions, including changes of email addresses. If you have problems, contact Kelly Butler.

CSPP Membership:  Membership is open to all mental health professionals ($85 annual dues); early career (10 years or less since degree, $50 annual dues); retirees ($30 annual dues); and graduate students ($20 annual dues).  For further information on CSPP membership, please click here: CSPP

Division 39 is committed to accessibility and non-discrimination in its continuing education activities. Participants are asked to be aware of needs for privacy and confidentiality throughout the program. If program content becomes stressful, participants are encouraged to process these feelings during discussion periods. If participants have special needs, we will attempt to accommodate them.

Please address questions or concerns to Ashley Warner, LCSW, BCD.

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