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B. A., Otterbein
College
M.S.W., Smith College School for Social Work
M.A., Boston University
(Applied Sociology)
Ph.D., Simmons College School
of Social Work
Direct practice with individuals and
families.
The interface of race and gender.
Clinical supervision and consultation.
Clinical social work education.
The significance of race in clinical practice.
The process of change in substance abuse treatment with pregnant women.
The legacy of slavery and undoing racism.
Hall, M. F. (2002). Race, gender and transference
in psychotherapy. In J. Magnavita (Ed.), Comprehensive
Handbook of Pychotherapy: Psychodynamic/object Relations
(Vol. 1, pp. 565-585). New York: John Wiley and Son.
March 1999: Correlates of Growth in Day Treatment with Low Income, Substance Abusing, Pregnant and Postpartum Women, Council on Social Work Education Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA.
January 1999: Correlates of Growth in Day Treatment with Low Income, Substance Abusing, Pregnant and Postpartum Women, Third Annual Conference, Society for Social Work & Research, Austin, TX.
May 1998: The Multiple Meanings of Race in Treatment: A Psychoanalytic Perspective," Ninth Annual Frantz Fanon, M.D. Memorial Lecturer, Scientific Series, Prostgraduate Center for Mental Health, New York, NY.
April 1998: The Significance of Race in Treatment. Juried
paper presented at the Massachusetts NASW Symposium '98, Boston, MA.
Hall, M. F. (1997). The war on drugs: A continuation of the war on the black family. Smith College Studies in Social Work, 67(3), 609-621. |