Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
The Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology
 
About the University
Overview of the School
Faculty and Administration Biographies
Stanley B. Messer
Clayton P. Alderfer
Nancy Boyd-Franklin
Brenna H. Bry
Cary Cherniss
Brian C. Chu
Nancy S. Fagley
Daniel B. Fishman
Susan. G. Forman
Sandra L. Harris
John Kalafat
Shalonda Kelly
James Langenbucher
Charles A. Maher
Barbara S. McCrady
Louis A. Sass
Kenneth C. Schneider
James Walkup
G. Terence Wilson
Lewis Gantwerk
Donald Morgan
Michael R. Petronko
Cyril M. Franks
Arnold A. Lazarus
Donald R. Peterson
Milton Schwebel
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Degrees Conferred, Dissertations October 2002– May 2004
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Camden Newark New Brunswick/Piscataway
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  Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology 2005-2007 Faculty and Administration Biographies Nancy Boyd-Franklin  

Nancy Boyd-Franklin

Ph.D., Columbia
Nancy Boyd-Franklin's special interests include multicultural issues, the treatment of African-American families, ethnicity and family therapy, home-based family therapy, marital and couples therapy, the multisystems approach to the treatment of poor inner-city families, issues for women of color, the development of a model of therapeutic support groups for African-American families living with AIDS, and issues in working with African-American children and adolescents. Her publications include numerous articles and chapters on the above topics. She has written five books including Black Families in Therapy: A Multisystems Approach; Children, Families, and HIV/AIDS: Psychosocial and Therapeutic Issues; Reaching Out in Family Therapy: Home-Based, School, and Community Interventions, with Dr. Brenna Bry; and Boys into Men: Raising Our African American Teenage Sons with Dr. Anderson J. Franklin. In 2003, the second edition of her book Black Families in Therapy: Understanding the African-American Experience was published. Her honors include the award for Outstanding Contributions to the Field of Ethnic Minority Psychology and to the Mentoring of Students from Division 45 of the APA (2001), the award for Outstanding Contributions to the Theory, Practice, and Research on Psychotherapy with Women from Division 35 of the APA (1996), the Distinguished Psychologist of the Year Award from the Association of Black Psychologists (1994), and the Pioneering Contribution to the Field of Family Therapy Award from the American Family Therapy Academy.


 
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