Despite the long-standing presence of humanistic psychology in a significant number of North American universities, this approach is largely marginal in universities in our country, usually limited to brief mentions and concise descriptions of its key figures and main ideas within the context of a particular course subject.
Thus, while in the United States and Canada the so-called third wave of psychotherapy has gradually gained ground, developing its principles and research, in Spain humanistic psychotherapists have had to create their own training programmes through their own associations, operating outside academia and relying heavily on self-management.
The mistrust shown by many of those responsible for training psychologists within state institutions may stem from the influence of certain actions once led by therapists linked to the humanistic movement — what Ramón Rosal (Erich Fromm Institute of Humanistic Psychology) refers to as the “adolescent stage of the movement”.