America's changing demographics have generated a new set of political, economic, and social challenges in responding to the needs of an increasingly multicultural population. Far from maintaining total cultural relativism, psychology and psychiatry have grown more aware of the dynamic interactions between culture and cognition and of their intimate connection to psychopathology. Still, the editors of Cultural Cognition and Psychopathology contend, psychological thinking, traditionally rooted in the doctrine of individualism, has failed to incorporate the role played by internalized culture in the constructs and methods used by this discipline.