The Status of Women: Worldwide Trends.- Women’s Lives in Contemporary Chinese Societies.- About Asian Indian Women: Stereotypes, Fabrications, and Lived Realities.- Women in Indonesia.- Women in Iran.- Women in Egypt.- Psychosocial Perspectives of Cameroonian Women.- Women in South Africa: Striving for Full Equality Post-Apartheid.- Women’s Identities and Roles in Italy.- Women Today in French Society.- The Status of Women: Brazil.- Women in Mexico: Advances in Their Status and Well-being.- Women in Belize.- Women in the United States.
Carrie M. Brown received her Ph.D. in experimental psychology
(developmental concentration), with a minor in research
methodology, from Saint Louis University. From 2011-2015, she
served as Assistant Professor of Psychology at Agnes Scott College
– a women’s college in Decatur, Georgia where she was the head of
the Race, Ethnicity, and Culture Lab. Currently the Secretary of
the Society for Cross-Cultural Research, she has been an author of
over 35 papers and posters that have been presented at conferences
both in the United States and other parts of the world. Her
research interests include racial and ethnic socialization, racial
and ethnic identity, acculturation, and interpersonal acceptance
and rejection. With Karen Ripoll-Nunez and Anna Laura Comunian, she
edited Expanding Horizons: Current Research on Interpersonal
Acceptance: Selected Papers from the Third International Congress
on Interpersonal Acceptance and Rejection (2012).
Uwe P. Gielen received his Ph.D. in social psychology from Harvard
University. His work has centered on international family
psychology, cross-cultural studies of human development,
international psychology, and gender roles in Tibetan societies. He
is Professor-Emeritus of Psychology and Founding Director of the
Institute for International and Cross-Cultural Psychology at St.
Francis College as well as a past chair of the Psychology Steering
Committee of the New York Academy of Sciences. A former president
of the Society for Cross-Cultural Research, the International
Psychology Division of the American Psychological Association, and
the International Council of Psychologists, he has edited,
co-edited, and co-authored 22 volumes concerned with cross-cultural
and international psychology. The volumes include Families in
Global Perspective (2005), International Approaches to the Family
and Family Therapy (1999), Childhood and Adolescence:
Cross-Cultural Perspectives and Applications (2004, 2nd ed. in
press), Toward a Global Psychology (2007), Handbook of Counseling
and Psychotherapy in an International Context (2013), and
Pathfinders in International Psychology (2015). He contributed a
chapter on “Gender Roles in Tibetan Societies” (1993) to Leonore L.
Adler’s Handbook on Gender Roles.
Judith L. Gibbons received her Ph.D. in psychology from
Carnegie-Mellon University. She is a Professor of Psychology and
International Studies at Saint Louis University where she
co-founded the Women's Studies Program and won the university-wide
teaching award. She is a Past-President of the Society for
Cross-Cultural Research, President of the Interamerican Society of
Psychology, a fellow of the American Psychological Association,
Editor of the APA Division 52 journal, International Perspectives
in Psychology: Research, Practice, Consultation, and the author of
over 65 articles in peer-reviewed journals. Her work has centered
on adolescent development and gender differences with an
international perspective and a focus on Guatemala. Her book,
co-authored with Deborah Stiles, The Thoughts of Youth: An
International Perspective on Adolescents’ Ideal Persons (2004),
includes documentation and discussion of gender differences among
adolescents from 20 nations. She also co-edited, with Karen Smith
Rotabi, the volume, Intercountry Adoption: Policies, Practices, and
Outcomes (2012).Judy Kuriansky received her Ph.D. in clinical
psychology from New York University, where she taught for years
before moving to Columbia University Teachers College where she
teaches in the Department of Counseling and Clinical Psychology and
supervises graduate students in special projects. At the
United Nations, she serves as the Main Representative for the
International Association of Applied Psychology and the World
Council of Psychotherapy; on the board of CoNGO (the Committee of
NGOs at the UN); as well as the Chair of the Psychology Coalition
at the United Nations. She has been awarded many honors, including
the “Lifetime Achievement in Global Peace and Tolerance” from
Friends of the United Nations and humanitarianism prizes from China
and from Voices of African Mothers. On the Board of U.S. Doctors
for Africa, a Trustee of the New York City Peace Museum, and a
Fellow of the American Psychological Association, she is also the
founder of the Global Kids Connect Project and the Stand Up for
Peace Project, and hosted the U.S.-Africa Business Summit and award
ceremonies for First Ladies of Africa.
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