St. John’s Professor Appointed to Exclusive APA Task Force

July 10, 2007

Beverly Greene, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology has been appointed by the American Psychological Association to serve on a task force charged with reviewing the most current research on therapeutic responses to sexual orientation.

Greene joins five other scholars selected to the task force, scheduled to begin its review later this month at APA’s Washington, DC, headquarters. The group will analyze scientific literature on clinical approaches to sexual orientation, giving special attention to research published since 1997 — the year APA passed its most recent resolution on that topic. At the end of this year, the task force will deliver a report to the APA president and board of directors making recommendations on how to revise the 1997 resolution to include the most appropriate and efficacious therapeutic approaches.

A practicing clinical psychologist, Greene is an expert on multiple-marginalization, which affects individuals who are members of more than one socially marginalized group, such as African-Americans, women, gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender individuals. Her research gives special credence to ways in which members of these communities experience marginalization within therapeutic environments, making her a logical selection for the task force.

Greene says that, contrary to public belief, many abuses and acts of prejudice are carried out by therapists in clinical settings. “It’s more prevalent than we’d like to see,” she says, noting that therapists often misattribute the behaviors of marginalized individuals to certain pathologies. “It’s critical that therapists get as much information as possible about how to avoid recapitulating the marginalization people already experience outside of therapy inside of therapy, because it further damages them. And our highest ethical goal is that we do no harm to our patients.”

Greene’s appointment has received several enthusiastic nods of approval from colleagues in her field. “For years, Beverly Greene has been one of psychology’s most prominent commentators on issues of gender and sexual orientation, so I’m not surprised that she was chosen to participate in such and important task force,” says St. John’s psychology Professor John Hogan, Ph.D., a longtime APA member and current Section Editor of American Psychologist, the APA’s flagship publication. “It’s a joy for me to work with her,” he adds.

Anneliese Singh, President-Elect of the Association of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Issues in Counseling, adds that her organization “is excited and confident that [Greene] will make significant contributions to this task force."

With more than 148,000 members, the APA is the world’s largest association of psychologists.

According to an APA press release, the task force will address topics such as children and adults who express a desire to change their sexual orientation; adolescent inpatient facilities that offer coercive treatment designed to change sexual orientation; the training of therapists; and treatment protocols that promote stereotyped gender-normative behavior.

Greene observes that the goals of the task force hew neatly to the University’s Vincentian mission of serving underprivileged members of society. “It’s directly applicable,” she notes. “We’re focusing on people who are members of groups that are marginalized and discussing the therapies that develop the healthiest kinds of responses to their marginalization.”

Greene has been an APA fellow for 15 years and in 2006 became the first African-American honored with the APA’s Florence Halpern Award, bestowed annually to individuals who make significant advancements within the field of psychology. She is the founding co-editor of the APA’s Division 44 book series titled “Psychological Perspectives on Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Issues” and the recipient of several APA honors, including the Outstanding Leadership Award from the Committee on Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Concerns (1996) and the Distinguished Leadership Award from the Committee on Women in Psychology (2003).

The author of more than 75 articles and seven books, including, most recently, What Therapists Don’t Talk About and Why: Understanding Taboos that Hurt Us and Our Clients, Greene currently is editing two books: Phenomenal Women: Psychological Resilience and Vulnerability in High-Achieving Black Women, and A Minyan of Women, a collection of narratives by female Jewish psychotherapists. The latter includes a contribution by St. John’s Associate Professor of Psychology Andrea Bergman, Ph.D.