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Michigan Conference
September 17, 18, 19, 2008
NATIONAL FACULTY:
David Adams
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David Adams, Ed.D.
Co-Director Emerge
David Adams, Ed.D., is co-founder as well as Co-Director of Emerge,
in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the first counseling program in the nation
for men who abuse women, established in 1977. Dr. Adams has led groups
for men who batter for 30 years and has led parenting education classes
for fathers for 6 years. He is one of the nation's leading experts on men
who batter and has conducted trainings of social service and criminal justice
professionals in 41 states and 11 nations. He has published numerous articles
and book chapters, including "Identifying the Assaultive Husband in Court:
You Be the Judge", published in the Boston Bar Journal. Dr. Adams
is past Co-Chair of the Justice and Accountability Committee (the criminal
justice committee) of the Governor’s Commission on Sexual and Domestic
Violence, and is Coordinator of the National Danger Assessment Training
Project. His book, “Why Do They Kill? Men Who Murder Their Intimate Partners”
was published by Vanderbilt University Press in September 2007. |
Juan Carlos Areán
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Juan Carlos Areán
Juan Carlos Areán works as a program manager for the Family
Violence Prevention Fund, in Newton, Massachusetts. He has devoted
the last 17 years to engaging men across different cultures to become better
fathers, intimate partners and allies to end domestic violence and achieve
gender equity. For over a decade, he worked at the Men's Resource Center
for Change in various capacities, including director of the Men Overcoming
Violence and the Refugees and Immigrants Programs. He also worked as a
sexual assault prevention specialist at Harvard University.
Mr. Areán is co-author of various articles, curricula and educational
tools for men, including Working With Fathers in Batterer Intervention
Programs (Oxford University Press), Breaking the Cycle: Fathering After
Violence (FVPF) and an on-line toolkit for engaging men and boys in violence
prevention.
He has been instrumental in developing the implementation and training
of the FVPF’s international initiative Coaching Boys into Men and recently
helped produce the ground-breaking documentary Something
my Father Would Do: Overcoming Legacies of Family Violence.
Mr. Areán sits in several governing and advisory boards, including
the National Latino Alliance for the Elimination of Domestic Violence and
the Massachusetts Governor’s Council to Address Sexual and Domestic Violence.
He is an active trainer, who has led hundreds of workshops and presentations
throughout the United States, as well as in Mexico, Chile, Russia, Sweden,
Austria, the United Nations and the US Congress.
Breaking the Cycle: Fathering After Violence
Curriculum
Guidelines and Tools for Batterer Intervention Programs (Free curriculum
and materials!) |
Jacquelyn Boggess
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Jacquelyn L. Boggess
Jacquelyn L. Boggess is the Co-Director of the Center
for Family Policy and Practice (formerly The Center on Fathers, Families,
and Public Policy), in Madison, Wisconsin. Ms. Boggess has worked with
the Center since its inception in 1995. Her work as a policy analyst involves
the investigation of the welfare system, the family law courts, and the
child support system. Her particular interest is the interrelations among
these systems, and how the social welfare policy and practice that result
from this relationship effect low-income fathers, mothers and children.
Additionally, Ms. Boggess has concentrated on the question of the impact
of government initiated “family formation” and father involvement policy
on women and children. Her work in this regard has resulted in connections
and collaborations with domestic violence organizations and progressive
advocacy groups working on poverty reduction, violence prevention, and
economic justice for parents and children. |
Eusebus Ekere
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Eusebus Ekere, MHA
Eusebus Ekere, MHA is originally born in Nigeria West Africa and migrated
to United States in 2001. He is a proud father of one Winnie Ekere and
married to Chidimma Ekere. Eusebus has worked with parents especially fathers
for over 4 years. He was a presenter in a panel organized by spectrum communities
Grand Rapids “How to involve dad’s in families”. Euse is the program coordinator/
facilitator for proud fathers proud parents program for center of family
development at United Methodist Community
House. He is also the program coordinator for Healthy Marriage Healthy
Relationship and a member of Michigan fatherhood coalition group. |
Ed Gondolf
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Dr. Edward W. Gondolf
Edward W. Gondolf, Ed.D., M.P.H., is Director of Research for the Mid-Atlantic
Addiction Research and Training Institute (MARTI), in Indiana, Pennsylvania,
where he conducts grant-funded research on the response of the courts,
mental health practitioners, alcohol treatment clinicians, and batterer
programs to domestic violence. He most recently completed a clinical trail
of specialized counseling for African-American men arrested for domestic
violence, under a grant from the National Institute of Justice (NIJ), and
a comparison study of case management with similar men under a grant from
the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency (PCCD). He is currently
evaluating the effectiveness of supplemental mental health treatment for
domestic violence offenders with NIJ funds.
From 1994-2001, Dr. Gondolf was Principal Investigator of a multi-site
evaluation of batterer intervention programs funded by the Centers for
Disease Control (CDC). This seven-year study tracked 840 batterers and
their female partners from four geographically-dispersed cities. Dr. Gondolf
also recently completed four other court studies sponsored by the Pennsylvania
Commission on Crime and Delinquency (PCCD) and the National Institute of
Justice (NIJ), and two foundation-funded evaluations of intensive outpatient
treatment for alcohol abuse.
Dr. Gondolf has been a Professor of Sociology at Indiana University
of Pennsylvania (IUP) since 1982. During 1991 to 1994, he was the founding
president of the Domestic Abuse Counseling Center (DACC) in Pittsburgh.
DACC receives approximately 2000 referrals per year from the domestic violence
courts in the Pittsburgh area. From 1988 to 1992, Dr. Gondolf served as
a research fellow at Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University
of Pittsburgh Medical School, and as Clinical Consultant to the Domestic
Relations Clinic, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Pittsburgh. In 1993-1996,
he was Research Consultant to the National Resource Center on Domestic
Violence funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Dr. Gondolf has authored nine books on wife abuse, including, Men Who
Batter: An Integrated Approach to Stopping Wife Abuse (1985), Battered
Women as Survivors: An Alternative to Treating Learned Helplessness (1988),
Psychiatric Response to Family Violence: Identifying and Confronting neglected
Danger (1990), and Batterer Intervention Systems: Issues, Outcomes and
Recommendations (2002), as well as over 120 research and clinical articles
on men who batter, domestic violence in general, and community development.
Psychiatric Response, based on a study funded by the National Institute
of Mental Health (NIMH), analyzes data from 382 psychiatric patients to
document the clinical neglect of reported family violence in favor of identifying
mental disorders. Battered Women as Survivors, done in cooperation with
the Texas Council on Family Violence, analyzes 6,000 intake interviews
with shelter residents to establish ethnic and regional incidents, women’s
help-seeking, police response, and batterer types. Assessing Women Battering
in Mental Health Settings (1997), draws on this previous research and a
national survey of battered women’s services to identify issues and recommend
procedures for clinicians.
Dr. Gondolf has extended his work to the international scene presenting
papers at conferences in Portugal, Spain, Dominican Republic, India, Hungary,
Ireland, Italy, Australia, and Russia. His second Fulbright Award for research
and lecturing in India addressed the impact of rural colleges on community
development, and the impact of the Indian women's movements on wife abuse.
During the last decade, Dr. Gondolf has participated in bi-annual symposiums
on domestic violence and alcohol abuse at St. Petersburg State University
in Russia, and conducted collaborative research comparing spousal homicide
in the United States and Russia.
Dr. Gondolf received a bachelor's degree in sociology focusing on social
psychology and deviance from Princeton University in 1970, a master's degree
in community psychology from the Harvard Graduate School of Education in
1976, a doctor's degree in education with a concentration in community
sociology from Boston University in 1979, and a master's in public health
majoring in psychiatric epidemiology from the University of Pittsburgh
in 1988. He also completed a National Institute of Mental Health post-doctoral
fellowship at the Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University
of Pittsburgh Medical School, in the late 1980s. He was born and raised
near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. |
Matthew Grimes
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Matthew Grimes
Matthew Grimes is Court Liaison and a co-facilitator at the ADVANCE
Program of Lutheran Social Services of South Central Pennsylvania and a
MHS student at Lincoln University. He is a 33-year-old African American
man who has also worked successfully in music and culinary arts.
He brings particular knowledge about pop culture and its influence on youth
and male socialization. He has been a speaker in schools and has
provided training for police and community social service workers on the
topics of masculinity and domestic violence. |
Julie Johnson
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Julie L. Johnson, Metaphorologist, M.A./TLA, M.S. (ABD)
Julie L. Johnson, Grand Blanc, Michigan, is the director of The
P.A.U.S.E. Program. For over 20 years, Johnson has passionately worked
toward ending intimate partner violence on several fronts. Johnson considered
an expert group facilitator and trainer is a Metaphorologist and holds
a M.A. in Transformative Language Arts and an M. S. in Psychology. Johnson’s
unique cognitive behavioral approach, using metaphor and art therapy techniques,
has helped hundreds of clients rewire programmed abusive behaviors.
As the former clinical training director for the Domestic Abuse Counseling
Center (DACC) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the largest batterer’s intervention
program in western Pennsylvania, Johnson introduced metaphor, art therapy
and the multi-sensory approach to the agency.
Johnson has written curricula and developed programs beyond the one-size-fits-all
paradigm, which yield completion rates well above the national average
for BIP’s. Ms. Johnson’s multi-dimensional work includes:
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Facilitation of over 70 training workshops for counseling/rehab centers,
judges, probation departments, teachers, and students in both the U.S.
and Canada on the use of metaphor and art therapy to defuse resistance
among highly resistant clients.
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Program development and facilitator for youth alternative education program
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Counselor for women and youth in victim service programs.
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Adjunct professor: Art Therapy/Methods and Theory, Communication Skills.
Johnson’s training techniques were recently published in RESPECT, a United
Kingdom publication (2007). Johnson was also cited as an expert on domestic
violence intervention techniques in, Leading Groups in Corrections: Skills
and Techniques (2003) published by The American Correctional Association.
Ms. Johnson is also the author of The Healing Journal: A guide to journaling,
childhood sexual abuse and recovery published by The Menninger Foundation.
Julie Johnson, with her unique style, quick wit and seasoned ability
transforms abstract concepts into tangible applications. |
Juanita Jones
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Juanita Jones, MHS
Juanita Jones, MHS, is Program Coordinator and a co-facilitator at the
ADVANCE
Program of Lutheran Social Services of South Central Pennsylvania, a domestic
abuse intervention program in York County. She is also a therapist
at Diakon Lutheran Social Ministries in a specialized in-home program for
adolescent sex offenders. She is a co-founder of York Rape Crisis Center
(now Victim Assistance Center) and ACCESS-York, a shelter for battered
women. She participated in the design, implementation, and co-facilitation
of Women Choosing Non-Violence, which addresses women’s use of violence,
and ADVANCE Fatherhood for men whose abuse affected a child. She
earned a Master of Human Services degree from Lincoln University, and additional
background includes work in crisis intervention, public welfare, and adult
sex offender treatment. |
David Mandel
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David Mandel, MA
David Mandel, MA, has been working in the domestic field for over 19
years in Middletown, Connecticut. Mr. Mandel writes, trains and consults
nationally on improving systems' responses to domestic violence when children
are involved and batterer accountability and change. In addition to national
research on batterer's perceptions of their children's exposure to their
violence, Mr. Mandel has developed a series of public awareness and outreach
posters designed to shift cultural attitudes about domestic violence. He
has written a forty-hour curriculum, entitled Dedication, which is being
used to train all new batterer intervention providers in Texas. Mr. Mandel
has also written a curriculum for working fathers entitled Being Connected
and co-authored a batterer intervention program manual.
Mr. Mandel has extensive experience improving the response of child
protection agencies to domestic violence. He has worked with New York City's
Administration for Children Services, various US Greenbook sites and other
jurisdictions to improve outcomes for children in families where batterer's
behavior is a concern. David has developed and piloted a 2 ½ day
national workshop seminar, “Safe and Together: Concrete Strategies for
Addressing Domestic Violence When Children Are the Focus.” He is currently
overseeing the implementation of a statewide network of domestic violence
consultants for the Connecticut Department of Children and Families.
Web: www.endingviolence.com |
Dave Mathews
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David J. Mathews, PsyD, LICSW
David Mathews, PsyD, LICSW, is the Director of Therapy, Domestic
Abuse Project, in Minneapolis, Minnesota and has over twenty-five years
of experience working in the field of violence and violence prevention.
He is employed as Director of Therapy at Domestic Abuse Project (DAP) where
he oversees all counseling and therapeutic services for women, men, children
and adolescents as well as some special projects.
Dr. Mathews has been in private practice at the Trust Family Center
at Judson in Southwest Minneapolis for over 15 years. He has specialized
in work on violence, men’s issues, post-traumatic stress, violence response
trainings, school violence, adolescents, couples, families, parenting,
and relationships.
Prior to his employment at DAP he worked for Casa de Esperanza for two
and a half years as the Systems Change Manager, providing cultural proficiency
trainings and consultation. He worked for 13 years at the Wilder Community
Assistance Program facilitating men’s domestic abuse groups, women’s domestic
abuse groups, children’s domestic abuse groups, parent groups, and groups
for young adults who have experienced violence. Dr. Mathews developed,
assisted in creating, or coordinated more than 20 different programs related
to violence or violence prevention, including Restorative Parenting and
the Community Violence Response Team Project.
Dr. Mathews has been an active member of the Initiatives for Violence-Free
Families and Communities in Ramsey and Hennepin Counties for sixteen years.
One of the Action Teams within the Initiatives Dr. Mathews has been on
since its inception is the Men’s Messages Action Team which created and
has overseen the Men’s Line that is a 24-hour free and confidential crisis,
help, counseling, and referral phone line specifically for men, the first
of its kind in the Country and now receives about 100 calls per month from
men throughout the State of Minnesota. Mathews has been a member of the
Archdiocese Committee on Domestic Violence for sixteen years.
Dr. Mathews has authored several works related to violence, bullying,
men who batter, Restorative Parenting in the aftermath of violence in the
home, violence in the workplace and violence prevention. In addition, he
has produced or co-produced several media products for training professionals
in the field of intimate partner violence/ domestic violence. He presents
and trains professionals on local, national and international levels. Dr.
Mathews teaches a course on domestic violence and prevention at the University
of Minnesota in the undergraduate program in Family Violence at the School
of Social Work and two courses (Adolescent Psychology – Undergrad Psychology
and Program Design and Community Intervention – Graduate Community Psychology)
at Metropolitan State University. He also consults with businesses, governmental
agencies, and other organizations relative to violence and violence prevention. |
Fernando Mederos
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Fernando Mederos, Ed.D.
Fernando Mederos, Ed.D. became Director of Special Projects—Fatherhood
at the Massachusetts Department of Social Services in 2006 after serving
as a consultant on intervening with men who batter in the agency’s Domestic
Violence Unit since 1997. His mission is to increase the Department’s
capacity to engage positively with fathers in a way that is strength-based,
culturally competent, sensitive to safety and domestic violence issues,
and promotes healthy, nurturing, and respectful engagement with children
and partners. He is a practitioner (consultant, writer and trainer),
and he focuses on identifying culturally-based values, models and practices
that are effective in working with fathers and that promote respectful
and egalitarian relationships between men and women in diverse cultures.
He has consulted with the U.S. Department of Justice (OVW), the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, and organizations funded by OVW
to provide technical assistance to federal grantees. He is co-chair
of the Board of the National Latino
Alliance for the Elimination of Domestic Violence (Alianza).
He is principal writer of: Accountability
and Connection with Abusive Men: A New Child Protection Response to Increasing
Family Safety. (2004), a manual on intervening with men who batter
in the child protection caseload and co-editor of Programs
for Men Who Batter: Intervention and Prevention Strategies In A Diverse
Society. [2002: Aldarondo, E. & Mederos, F. (Eds.) Kingston,
New Jersey: Civic Research Institute.]
Important resource:
Children
& DV Toolbox (many free materials) |
Lisa Nitsch
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Lisa Nitsch
Gateway Project Program Manager
Lisa Nitsch, BA is the Program Manager for Gateway Project, and is a
lifelong resident of Baltimore City, Maryland. She has worked at that House
of Ruth Maryland for over ten years. The Gateway Project is the men’s
abuser intervention service of the domestic violence prevention agency.
Mrs. Nitsch oversees the day-to-day operation of the program and coordinates
new program initiatives to improve the quality and scope of services. She
was a principle driving force in the philosophical shift and functional
redesign of the program from ‘The Batterers’ Program’ to ‘The Gateway Project’
in 2003. This adaptation of the program focused on supporting men in a
change process by encouraging them to set their own personal goals without
shame while still holding them accountable for their abusive behavior.
Mrs. Nitsch currently serves as the Vice President of Women In Fatherhood,
Inc. She is also an active member of the Maryland Regional Practitioner’s
Network for Fathers & Families Board of Directors. She serves as a
member of Baltimore City’s Domestic Violence Fatality Review Team and the
city’s Coordinating Council, and is Co-Chair of the Maryland Abuser Intervention
Collaborative.
Mrs. Nitsch’s focus in the domestic violence field is on evaluating
“success” for abuser intervention programs, engaging men in work to end
violence against women, and coordinating public systems to best ensure
victim safety. She demonstrates strength in creating community partnerships
among programs that have historically had conflicting agendas and provides
technical assistance in this area to programs across the country. |
Johnny Rice II
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JOHNNY RICE II, M.S., Dr. PH Candidate
Mr. Rice currently serves as Special Assistant for the Office of the
Secretary, Maryland Department of
Human Resources – “Maryland’s Human Services Agency”. The Maryland
Department of Human Resources administers and provides oversight to statewide
domestic violence efforts through the Victims of Crime Assistance Program,
The Domestic Violence Program, and Rape Crisis and Sexual Assault Program.
He formerly served as Chief Operating Officer for Communities Organized
To Improve Life, Inc. and historic community development corporation located
in Southwest Baltimore City. Prior to joining COIL he served as Chief
Operating Officer and Director of Men's Services for the Center for Fathers,
Families, and Workforce Development (CFWD). While at CFWD he assisted
in the developing a partnership with the House of Ruth Maryland Gateway
Project, one of the first in the area between a Responsible Fatherhood
oriented service provider and an Abuser Intervention Program (AIP).
More recently Mr. Rice served on the Family and Relationship Panel for
the National Domestic Violence Hotline’s Decade for Change Summit and served
as national faculty for the first Institute on Fatherhood, Visitation and
Domestic Violence sponsored by the Family Violence Prevention Fund.
He holds Bachelor and Master’s degrees in Criminal Justice from the
University of Baltimore with a specialization in Corrections. Mr.
Rice also serves as an Adjunct Faculty member in the University of Baltimore’s
Division of Criminology, Criminal Justice and Social Policy. He is
currently pursuing his Doctor of Public Health degree at Morgan State University.
Additional:
Mr. Rice's past employment experience covers a great cross-section of
diverse areas such as substance abuse counseling in correctional setting,
foster worker in local within the Human Services arena.
While working for the Baltimore City Department of Social Services Mr.
Rice was given the task of reunification of families. He would often
assist in devising treatment plans for parents in efforts to strengthen
the fragile family unit. As an Addictions Counselor III within the
Maryland correctional system, Mr. Rice worked with incarcerated inmates
teaching classes in Moral Problem Solving and Relapse Prevention.
Working in corrections exposed Mr. Rice to low-income non-custodial fathers
who were in need of support services (i.e. ongoing substance abuse treatment,
domestic violence counseling, child support arrearage issues, and access
to children concerns). He actively pursued resources to meet the
fathers’ needs. |
Roger Steffy
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Roger Steffy, MDiv
Roger Steffy, MDiv, is Director and a co-facilitator at the ADVANCE
Program of Lutheran Social Services of South Central Pennsylvania, a domestic
abuse intervention program in York County. An ordained minister with
14 years of pastoral experience, he has done domestic violence education
work with clergy, churches, and human service professionals for 16 years.
He began working with batterers in 1996 and accepted this position with
ADVANCE in 2003. He has worked with adult sex offenders, and with
victims of ritualistic sexual abuse. He and his wife, Carol, have
two young-adult children. Roger loves hiking, birding, music, and
flowers, and is passionate about fostering authentic non-abusive masculinity
as an alternative to the dominator model of manhood. |
Lee Taft
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Lee Taft, J.D., M.Div.
Lee Taft is a nationally recognized expert on apology and its role in
the transformative processes of repentance, forgiveness, and reconciliation.
Lee worked as a dually board certified trial specialist in Dallas, Texas
for more than twenty years before entering Harvard Divinity School in 1996.
Today he designs responses to injury – and systems to support those responses
– based on accountability, fairness, and integrity. His publications include
Apology Subverted the seminal essay on apology in legal contexts published
by the YALE LAW JOURNAL, Apology and Medical Error published by the ANNALS
OF HEALTH LAW, Apology Within a Moral Dialectic published by the UNIVERSITY
OF MICHIGAN LAW REVIEW, and Disclosure Danger published this spring by
the HARVARD HEALTH POLICY REVIEW. Last summer, he partnered with Stanford
University to design and launch PEARL, a system-wide approach to unanticipated
outcomes in medical care. In domestic violence settings, Lee has worked
directly with both the perpetrator and recipient of harm and has trained
professional staffs who work with these populations.
Web: http://www.taftsolutions.com/index.html |
Rich Tolman
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Richard M. Tolman, LMSW, Ph.D
Professor Richard M. Tolman, LMSW, Ph.D is a Professor at the University
of Michigan, School of Social Work. He received his doctorate in Social
Welfare from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and his MSW from the University
of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His research focuses on violence against women
and children, the effectiveness of interventions designed to change violent
and abusive behavior, and the traumatic effects of violence on the well-being
of victims. He began work with batterer intervention programs in
1980, and was involved in early efforts in the 1990’s to create collaborations
between positive fathering programs and batterer intervention programs.
His current projects include research on the impact of and prevention of
psychological abuse during pregnancy and involvement of men as allies to
end violence against women.
Tolman is on the editorial board of the Journal of Emotional Abuse,
and was formerly the associate editor of the Journal of Interpersonal Violence.
He has served as a domestic violence expert on a number of national panels,
including NIMH, National Institute of Justice, the National Research Council,
and the National Women's Resource Center. |
Oliver J. Williams
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Oliver J. Williams, MSW, MPH, Ph.D.,
Oliver Williams, MSW, MPH, Ph.D., Professor, University of Minnesota
School of Social Work; Director, Institute
on Domestic Violence in the African American Community, St. Paul, MN
Oliver J. Williams, Ph.D., has worked in the field of domestic violence
for more than 28 years and has provided individual, couples, and family
counseling. He has been a substance abuse counselor, child welfare and
delinquency worker, worked in battered women's shelters, co-facilitated
recovery groups for sexual assault and battered women, developed curricula
for batterers' intervention programs and facilitated counseling groups
in these programs. He has provided training across the United States and
abroad on research and service-delivery surrounding partner abuse.
Dr. Williams' extensive research and publications in scholarly journals
and books have centered on creating effective service delivery, prevention
, and intervention strategies to address violent behavior and its consequences.
He serves on several national advisory boards and received numerous awards
for his work addressing issues of domestic violence. Dr. Williams received
a bachelor's degree in Social Work from Michigan State University, a Masters
in Social Work from Western Michigan University, and a Masters in Public
Health and a Ph.D. in Social Work both from the University of Pittsburgh.
He is a Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker. |
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Additional faculty may be added!
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