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How to Bring Cultural Responsivity into Supervision

This session explores how to create psychological and cultural safety in supervision, while navigating the balance of proximity and distance in cross-cultural relationships.

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Date

Thursday, 28th May 2026

5:15 PM – 6:45 PM

Past event

Location

Online

Hosted by

University of Melbourne

Cost

Free

This session explores how to create psychological and cultural safety in supervision, while navigating the balance of proximity and distance in cross-cultural relationships. It will also unpack transference and countertransference, and build confidence in facilitating complex conversations around race and identity.

Learning Objectives:

  • Explain key considerations when supervising a student from a diverse cultural background, exploring the principles of cultural humility, psychological safety and broaching.

  • Identify and implement practical strategies that support effective clinical supervision and strengthen the supervisory relationship.

  • Demonstrate approaches for initiating and facilitating discussions about culture, race, racism, and intersectionality within clinical supervision.

Presented by:

Nasalifya Namwinga (She/Her) Pola Practice Founder, Senior Clinical Psychologist, Research Lead, PhD Candidate

Nasalifya Namwinga (She/Her) is a Zambian woman who was raised in the (Swansea, Wales) UK and (kirikiriroa/Hamilton) New Zealand and now resides in Naarm (Melbourne, Australia). Her migration journey and lived experience of mental ill health inspired to pursue a mission to create spaces where those marginalised could access world-class mental health and wellbeing services. In 2018, she founded Pola Psychology (now Pola Practice).

Nasalifya provides consultation with a specialisation in culturally responsive mental health service delivery, executive coaching from an intersectional perspective and is pursuing a PhD exploring how generative AI can be leveraged to deliver training to mental health practitioners to be more culturally responsive. She on boards for arts and health organisations and has a keen interest in the intersection between art and well-being.