Contributors
Series Foreword
Mary Wyer
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Lynn H. Collins, Sayaka Machizawa, and Joy K. Rice
Chapter 1. Transnational Psychology of Women
Lynn H. Collins, Sayaka Machizawa, and Joy K. Rice
Chapter 2. The Transnational Turn: Looking Back and Looking
Ahead
Janet M. Conway
Chapter 3. Strategies and Considerations for Transnational Feminist
Research: Reflections From Research in Uganda
Jennifer J. Mootz and Sally D. Stabb
Chapter 4. Transnational Psychological Perspectives on Assessment
and Intervention
Lynn H. Collins
Chapter 5. A Transnational Feminist Perspective on the Psychology
of Migration
Oliva M. Espín and Andrea L. Dottolo
Chapter 6. Transnational Feminist Perspectives on Women's
Education, Work, and Leadership
Edwina Pio
Chapter 7. Using Transnational Feminist Theory to Expand Domestic
Violence Understandings
Alisha Guthery, Nicole Jeffrey, Sara Crann, and Elizabeth
Schwab
Chapter 8. Toward a Transnational Feminist Psychology of Women's
Reproductive Experiences
Jeanne Marecek
Chapter 9. Transnational Feminist Perspectives on Human
Trafficking: Centering Structures, Institutions, and Subjects
Julietta Hua and Jessica Tjiu
Chapter 10. Transnational Psychology in the Classroom: A
Pluralistic Approach
Lynn H. Collins, Jennifer J. Mootz, Jeanne Marecek, Alisha
Guthery, Sayaka Machizawa, Oliva M. Espin, Andrea L. Dottolo,
Julietta Hua, Sara Crann, Nicole Jeffrey, and Elizabeth Schwab
Chapter 11. Toward an Inclusive, Affirmative Transnational
Psychology
Joy K. Rice and Shelly Grabe
Glossary
Index
About the Editors
About the Editors
Lynn H. Collins, PhD, is associate professor of psychology at
La Salle University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Dr. Collins is a
fellow of the American Psychological Association (APA) and a
recipient of the Association for Women in Psychology’s Christine
Ladd-Franklin Award. She has served as president of APA Division 52
(International Psychology) and APA Division 35 (Society for the
Psychology of Women). Dr. Collins oversaw the creation of the
Division 52 journal, International Perspectives in Psychology:
Research, Practice, Consultation, and has served on the editorial
boards of Psychological Assessment; Psychology of Women Quarterly;
Sex Roles; Journal of Genetic Psychology; and Genetic, Social, and
General Psychology Monographs.
Sayaka Machizawa, PsyD, is senior clinical scientist at
Bracket Global. Born in Tokyo, Japan, and trained in the United
States, she is fully bilingual and uses her transmigrant background
to ensure development of culturally appropriate clinical content
for rater training and qualification programs in global clinical
trials by major pharmaceutical companies. Until 2016, Dr. Machizawa
worked at The Chicago School of Professional Psychology as
associate director of community partnerships and international
faculty lead, where she designed and taught study abroad courses in
Japan and oversaw service learning and community-based
participatory research projects. She has served numerous leadership
roles in the American Psychological Association.
Joy K. Rice, PhD, is a clinical psychologist, emerita
professor, and clinical professor at the University of
Wisconsin–Madison School of Medicine and Public Health. She is a
recipient of the Educational Press Association Distinguished
Achievement Award, the Florence L. Denmark and Mary E. Reuder Award
for outstanding international contributions to the psychology of
women and gender, and the 2008 Woman of the Year Award from the
American Psychological Association Section for the Advancement of
Women in Counseling Psychology. Dr. Rice is the coauthor of Living
Through Divorce: A Developmental Approach to Divorce Therapy; Women
and Leadership: Transforming Visions and Diverse Voices; and
Psychological Practice with Women: Guidelines, Diversity,
Empowerment.
“The complex conceptualization of transnational feminist
psychology, as posited in this volume, advocates for a paradigm
shift in the ways psychology approaches the intersectional and
international psychology of women. Emerging from multiple
disciplines, including sociology, political science, economics,
history, and women’s studies, transnational feminist psychology
makes visible the voices and experiences of the ‘Global Majority,’
roughly 85 percent of the world’s non-Western population.”
—Choice
*Choice*
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