Nancy felipe biography
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Nancy Russo
American psychologist
Nancy Felipe Russo (born May 3, 1943)[1] is an American psychologist and Regents Professor Emerita in the Department of Psychology at Arizona State University.[2] She has received media attention for her research on the psychological effects of abortion.[3][4]
Russo was born in Oroville, California and graduated from Oroville High School in 1961. She received her bachelor's degree from the University of California, Davis before earning her Ph.D. from Cornell University in 1970. After working at the City University of New York's Richmond College and the American Psychological Association, she joined the faculty of Arizona State University, where she taught from 1985 until retiring in 2010.[5] In 1996, she received the ward for Distinguished Contribution to Psychology in the Public Interest from the American Psychological Association.[1]
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Profile
Nancy Felipe Russo
Birth:
1943
Training Location(s):
PhD, Cornell University (1970)
Primary Affiliation(s):
The American Institutes for Research
Richmond College, City University of New York
The American Psychological Association
Arizona State University (1985 - Present)
Psychology’s Feminist Voices Oral History Interview:
Career Focus:
Reproductive issues; sex roles and mental health; factors influencing women's educational and career achievements; ethnic minority women's issues; social identities.
Biography
I'm not complaining, I'm saying this has to change right now! It's not a complaint, it's an ultimatum!
-Nancy Russo
Although renowned for her groundbreaking work on women and psychology, Nancy Russo wasn't always a feminist. Raised in rural California, the granddaughter of B
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Women in Psychology: A Bio-Bibliographic Sourcebook - Hardcover
Synopsis
These insightful essays, remarkably free of the jargon endemic to the social sciences, will enrich academic libraries' psychology reference collections. Wilson Library Bulletin
Women in Psychology is unique in that it is the first bio-bibliographic sourcebook on historical and contemporary women in psychology. It documents, preserves, and makes visible the diversity and excellence of women's contributions to the discipline. Separate chapters evaluate and provide a critical lens through which to view the contributions of 36 women, to the evolution of psychology. Women in Psychology is an especially rich bibliographic resource not only through references at the end of each chapter but through a separate five-part bibliographic chapter that identifies the most important books and other sources of information on women in psychology and references to autobiographical and biographic information on 185 women