Dr. Anne E Brodsky

About

Anne Brodsky is a community/clinical psychologist and professor. Her work focuses on risk and resilience, psychological sense of community, and how U.S. and Afghan communities create and resist societal risks and oppressions. Dr. Brodsky has served as Director of GWST (2005-2008), Associate Chair of Psychology (2008-2011), CAHSS Associate Dean for Research (2012-2016), Interim Director of MIPAR (2017-2018), and created the UMBC Center for Social Science Scholarship (2017-2018), and Chair of Psychology (2018-2024). She earned her A.B. from Vassar College and her M.A. and Ph.D. in clinical/community psychology from UMCP. She completed her clinical internship at Massachusetts Mental Health Center, Harvard Medical School, and a Postdoc in Prevention Science at Johns Hopkins. She was a 2016-2017 American Council on Education (ACE) Fellow.

Research interests

Dr. Brodsky's scholarship takes a strengths-based, largely qualitative and feminist approach to the study of risk and protective factors, resilience and empowerment, psychological sense of community, diversity and inclusion. She is the author of over 50 articles and chapters on these subjects, as well as one book, With All Our Strength: The Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA) (Routledge, 2003).

Teaching interests

Dr. Brodsky's teaching focuses on community psychology, strength-based research and intervention, qualitative methods, and diversity and inclusion in psychology.

Education

  • Postdoc, Prevention ScienceJohns Hopkins University, Bloomberg School of Public Health (1997)
  • Ph D, Clinical/Community PsychologyUMCP (1995)
  • , APA Approved Clinical Psychology InternshipAPA Accredited Clinical Internship, Massachusetts Mental Health Center, Harvard Medical School (1994)
  • MA, Clinical/Community PsychologyUMCP (1992)
  • BA, History & PsychologyVassar College (1987)