Michael A - University of Michigan



Michael A. Dover, BSW, MSSW, Ph.D.

Curriculum Vitae September 2009

|Work Address: |Home Address: |

|326 Chester Hall |2425 Foxway Dr. |

|School of Social Work |Ann Arbor MI 48105 |

|Cleveland State University |Home: (734)663-6972 |

|2121 Euclid Avenue |Cell: (216) 645-1555 |

|Cleveland Ohio 44115-2214 |Fax: (734) 661-5270 |

|Office: (216) 687-3564 |Email: mdover@umich.edu |

|Email: m.a.dover@csuohio.edu | |

Professional Education

|University of Michigan| Ph.D. in Social Work and Sociology, August 2003 |

|Ann Arbor, MI |Full-time residency 1991-2003 while engaged in part-time teaching, research, and admissions work. Supported 1992-1997 |

| |from a fellowship from the National Institute on Aging. |

| |Dissertation Title: The Social System of Real Property Ownership: Public and Nonprofit Property Tax Exemptions and |

| |Corporate Tax Abatements in City and Suburb, 1955-2000 |

| |Dissertation Advisor: Prof. David J. Tucker |

| |Dissertation Committee: Prof. David J. Tucker, Co-Chair (Director, Doctoral Program in Social Work and Social |

| |Science); Prof. Howard Kimeldorf (Chairperson, Dept. of Sociology); Prof. Lawrence S. Root; Prof. E. Ian Robinson |

| |Preliminary Examination in Sociology: Status and Power |

| |Preliminary Examination in Social Work: Older Adult Volunteer Participation (Prof. Ruth Dunkle, Chair; Prof. Sheila |

| |Feld; Prof. Barry Checkoway) |

| |Other areas of research: Social Welfare and the Cold War; Voluntary Association Activity of Older Detroiters. |

| |Coursework: Race and ethnicity (Pedraza); social relationships (Orbuch); social participation (Checkoway); social |

| |organization (Paige); international social welfare (Sarri); policy analysis (Birdsall); gender, family and state |

| |(Adams); individual change (Garvin); personal, family and social relationships (Orbuch); human services innovation |

| |(Tropman); sociological theory (Anspach); historical methods (Kimeldorf); organizational studies (Zald); structure of |

| |social service systems (Hurl); Eastern European societies (Kennedy); Detroit Area Study (Rodgers); a total of eight |

| |courses in quantitative analysis including multiple regression analysis, survey data analysis (Alwin), Lisrel |

| |(Rodgers), event history analysis (Teachman). |

|University of Michigan| M.A. in Sociology, 1996 This degree |

|Ann Arbor, MI |was earned along the way to completing the doctorate in social work and sociology. The degree required participating |

| |in the Detroit Area Study survey research, to which I later returned twice as a teaching assistant. |

|Columbia University | M.S.S.W., May 1980 (Four terms; direct practice of social work) |

|New York, NY |Internships: Harlem Hospital Child Psychiatry (Field Instructor, Rubina Eatmon); District 65-U.A.W. Personal Services |

| |Unit (Field Instructor, Beth Silverman). |

| |Coursework: Studied with Professors Akabas, Cloward, Gitterman, Kahn, Miller, Rosen, Solomon, Hellenbrand and others. |

| |Accomplishments: GPA 3.9; Student Union President; Curriculum Review Committee; Admissions Committee. |

| | |

|Adelphi University | B.S.W., August 1978 (Adelphi’s A.N.S.W.E.R. Program in Manhattan). Studied social policy (Phil Coltoff); social |

|School of Social Work |research (Michael Smith); social work practice (Kay Coltoff, George Lockhart and others). Was only European-American |

|Garden City, NY |student in this urban extension program designed for anti-poverty agency and other paraprofessional social service |

| |workers. Later returned as a part-time Faculty Advisor 1990-1991 (see Professional Employment section). |

| |Internships: Community Service Society Cause Program in Chelsea (junior year); N.Y.C. Board of Education Child Find |

| |Program (outreach program to underserved children with disabilities). |

Professional Certifications

| |

|Member, Academy of Certified Social Workers, 1983-Present |

|Licensed Master Social Worker (Clinical and Macro), State of Michigan, #6801065703 |

|Licensed Clinical Social Worker, State of Louisiana #2428 |

Academic Publications

|2010, February |Michael A. Dover, “Human Needs: An Annotated Bibliography”, Oxford Bibliography Online: Social Work. Edward |

|(forthcoming) |Mullen, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. This 12,000 word peer-reviewed publication includes in |

| |introductory section, introductory paragraphs for each of twenty sections and approximately 160 annotated |

| |references. |

|2009 |Michael A. Dover, “Rapport, Empathy and Oppression: Cross-Cultural Vignettes,” REFLECTIONS: Narratives of |

| |Professional Helping 15(4), 2009. Publication date November or December, 2009. |

|2008 |Dover, M. A. (2008). Oppression, Dehumanization and Exploitation: Connecting Theory to Experience. In D. Van Soest|

| |& B. Garcia (Eds.), Diversity Education for Social Justice: Mastering Teaching Skills (Second ed., pp. 366-393). |

| |Washington, DC: Council on Social Work Education. |

|2008 |Dover, M. A., & Joseph, B. H. R. (2008). Human needs: Overview. In T. Mizrahi & L. Davis (Eds.), The encyclopedia |

| |of social work (20th ed., pp. 398-406). New York: Oxford University Press and National Association of Social |

| |Workers. |

|2006 |David Horton Smith, Robert A. Stebbins, and Michael A. Dover, Dictionary of Nonprofit Terms and Concepts, |

| |Indianapolis, Indiana University Press. 360 page book contains more than 1200 terms and concepts valuable for the|

| |advancement of research and theory on the nonprofit sector, voluntary associations, voluntary action, civic |

| |participation, philanthropy, volunteer administration, leisure activities and grassroots organizations. The |

| |manuscript was peer reviewed by two anonymous publisher-selected reviewers from the field of voluntary sector |

| |scholarship. |

Academic Publications (Editor or Co-Editor)

|2010, Spring |Michael A. Dover, Guest Editor, Special Issue on Work and the Workplace, REFLECTIONS: Narratives of Professional |

| |Helping. Appointed November 2008 to edit this special issue, to which leading scholars and practitioners in the |

| |field will contribute. The Call for Papers was issued in the Fall 2008 issue. There is a December 31, 2009 |

| |deadline for submissions. |

|2000, June |Michael A. Dover, Charles Garvin, Sara Goodkind, Marilyn Moch, and Michael Reisch, Co-Editors, Special Issue of |

| |REFLECTIONS: Narratives of Professional Helping 6(2, Spring), titled “Responding to War: Social Workers and War in|

| |the Balkans”. |

Book Reviews

|1998, May |Michael A. Dover. Review of: Marian Swerdlow, Underground Woman: My Four Years as a New York City Subway |

| |Conductor. Philadelphia, Pa: Temple University Press, 1998. Sociological Focus, Journal of the North Central |

| |Sociological Association 32(2, May): 223-224. |

|1993, Fall |Michael A. Dover, “A Theory of Human Need.” Review of book of the same title by Len Doyal and Ian Gough (NY: |

| |Guilford Press, 1991). Published as page 8, BCR Reports: Quarterly Publication of the Bertha Capen Reynolds |

| |Society, Fall 1993. |

| | |

Professional Publications (Edited Newsletters)

|2005, Fall |Michael A. Dover, “How Did We Lose New Orleans? Katrina as Our Pearl Harbor” BCRReports: Publication of the |

| |Social Welfare Action Alliance, Volume XVII, Number 1, Fall 2005. |

| | |

|2004, March |Michael A. Dover, “Does social work need another rank-and-file movement?” BCRReports: Publication of the Social |

| |Welfare Action Alliance, Volume XV, Number 1, March 2004. Barbara Kasper, S.U.N.Y. Buffalo, Editor. |

| | |

|2002, Summer |“Linking education and practice: The need for an annual national social work conference.” ACOSA Update: Building|

| |Community and Administrative Practice in the 21st Century. Volume 16, Issue 2, Summer 2002, page 3. (Quoted and |

| |cited in Mildred “Mit” Joyner (2004), “Proactively Marketing Social Work Education and the Social Work |

| |Profession,” Federico Lecture, Baccalaureate Program Directors Association, Fall 2004 (Detroit, Michigan). For |

| |full text of article, please see: |

|1998, Fall |Michael A. Dover, “Globalization and Cold War: Why No Peace Dividend?”. BCR Reports, Publication of the Bertha |

| |Capen Reynolds Society. (Volume X, No. 2, Fall 1998, pp. 12-13). Barbara Kasper, S.U.N.Y. Buffalo, Editor. |

| | |

|1997, Spring |Michael A. Dover, “Activism, Professionalization and the Future of the Bertha Capen Reynolds Society: Another |

| |view.” BCR Reports, Publication of the Bertha Capen Reynolds Society. Volume IX (1, Spring): 5-6, 1997. Cited |

| |in Michael Reisch and Janice Andrews (2002), The Road Not Taken: A History of Radical Social Work in the United |

| |States. |

|1991, Winter |Michael A. Dover, “Tearing Down the Walls on the U.S. Left,” BCR Reports: Publication of the Bertha Capen |

| |Reynolds Society, Volume III, Nos. 2-3, Winter 1991, pp. 10-11. |

| | |

|1991, Winter |Michael A. Dover and Marilyn A. Moch, “Work for Peace Now!”, BCR Reports: Publication of the Bertha Capen |

| |Reynolds Society, Volume III, Nos. 2-3, Winter 1991, pp. 1, 15. |

| | |

Presentation of Papers at Professional/Academic Meetings

|2009, September |Michael A. Dover, “Bringing Social Justice Back Into Social Work,” invitational plenary panel presentation, 4th |

| |Annual Conference of the National Social Work Action Network, held at the Department of Social and Policy |

| |Science, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath, United Kingdom. |

|2009, September |Michael A. Dover, "From Social Work Practice to Sociological Theory: Theoretical Perspectives Arising from Direct|

| |Practice, Community Organization, Teaching |

| |Practice, and Social Change Activism." Peer-reviewed workshop presented at the 4th Annual Conference of the |

| |National Social Work Action Network, held at the Department of Social and Policy Science, University of Bath, |

| |Claverton Down, Bath, United Kingdom. |

|2008, October |Michael A. Dover, “Thinking Inside the Mixed Economy Box: Pragmatic Policy Analysis as a Progressive Alternative |

| |to Neoliberal Policy Assumptions”. Panel presentation at CSWE Partnership Presentation, Philadelphia, November |

| |2008, “Katrina Recovery, Immigration, Social Activism: 2008 Social Welfare Action Alliance Conference Follow-up,”|

| |Manoj Pardasani, Moderator. |

|2007, October |Michael A. Dover, “Yet Another Typology of Theories of the Welfare State,” Paper presented to a conference |

| |marking the 50th Anniversary of the Doctoral Program in Social Work and Social Science, University of Michigan, |

| |Ann Arbor. |

|2007, June |Michael A. Dover, “Towards an Alternative to Neoliberalism,” paper presented to the 2007 Conference of the Social|

| |Welfare Action Alliance, New Orleans Louisiana, June 14-17, 2007. |

|2006, October |Peggy Pittman-Munke and Michael A. Dover, “Bridging from Classroom to Practice: Outcome Assessment for Diversity |

| |Content.” Presented to the 24th Annual Baccalaureate Social Work Education Conference, Los Angeles, October 26, |

| |2006. |

|2006, March |Michael A. Dover, “Beyond the Isms: Getting in Touch with Words and Affective Phrases about Experiencing |

| |Oppression, Dehumanization and Exploitation.” Paper presented at the Midwest Social Work Education Conference, |

| |Ferris State University, March 2006. Participants identified words and affective phrases describing the feelings|

| |people experience due to acts of oppression, dehumanization and exploitation. These are shared on 3x5 cards that|

| |are shuffled, redistributed, and discussed. A compendium of responses from previous exercise participants is |

| |distributed for use in classrooms and in practice. Early draft of paper presented along with long-used teaching |

| |material being developed for submission for publication in the Journal of Teaching in Social Work. |

|2006, March |“Deconstructing Accreditation Standards: Program Evaluation and Improvement of Diversity and Oppression |

| |Content,” Michael A. Dover and Peggy Pittman Munke, paper presented at the Midwest Social Work Education |

| |Conference, Ferris State University, March 2006. The paper presents a program evaluation and improvement |

| |strategy that facilitates practicing without discrimination, knowledge of diverse cultures and populations at |

| |risk, understanding oppression and social justice, and advocating for social change. Discrete objectives |

| |facilitate the identification of specific competencies and a modular curriculum that improves diversity and |

| |oppression content. Presentation being considered by the co-presenters for development into article for the |

| |Journal of Baccalaureate Social Work. |

|2005, July |“Human Needs Panel," Panel presentation at a semi-plenary panel on human needs, with Prof. Daysi Mejia and Prof. |

| |Barbara Joseph, 20th Anniversary Conference, Social Welfare Action Alliance, Toledo Ohio. Presented twice |

| |concurrent with the also-twice presented Human Rights Panel. |

|2004, October |Michael Dover, “Towards an Alternative to Neo-Liberalism: Class, Institutional and Organizational Analysis of the|

| |Role of Public, Nonprofit and Market Mechanisms for Achieving Social Justice,” paper presented for the 2004 |

| |Annual Meeting of the Michigan Sociological Association, Mt. Pleasant MI, October 23, 2004. Substantial paper |

| |presented is being revised for submission Summer 2007 to the Journal of Progressive Human Services. |

|2004, November |Michael A. Dover, “Better Marketing (Professionalism) or Better Organization (Professionalization)? Which |

| |Direction for Social Work?,” paper proposal submitted for presentation at the Association of Baccalaureate |

| |Program Directors conference, November 2004, Detroit Michigan. Paper not being developed for publication. |

|2004, October |Michael Dover, Central Michigan University: “Globalization and the Fate of Post-Cold War Social Welfare”, invited|

| |presentation for panel on “Globalization and the Social Welfare State”, Prof. David Jesuit moderator, 36th Annual|

| |Michigan Conference of Political Scientists, Mt. Pleasant MI, October 15-16, 2004. Bibliographical updating and |

| |data exploration were begun Summer 2006, with a view to updating this and related work (see paper for Howard |

| |Kimeldorf, December 1996, and monograph for Michael Kennedy (December 1995) in section below on unpublished |

| |papers of continued intellectual interest. I plan to develop this into both a theoretical article and an |

| |empirical article, following publication of material based upon my dissertation. |

|2003, March |Michael Dover, “Bringing property back into thinking about Cincinnati’s system of real property: The growth of |

| |public, nonprofit and religious tax exemptions and corporate tax abatements, 1955-2000,” at North Central |

| |Sociological Association. This paper was an early version of material subsequently included in my dissertation. |

|1998, November |Michael A. Dover, “Multiple Theories, Multiple Volunteer Role Relationships: Yet Another Typology of Theories of |

| |Volunteer Participation,” paper presented to the 17th Annual Conference, Association for Research on Nonprofit |

| |Organizations and Voluntary Action, November 1998, Seattle, Washington. |

|1997, December |Michael A. Dover, “Enhancing Older Volunteer Empowerment, Activism and Effectiveness: Theoretical and Research |

| |Support for Developing a Senior Citizen Volunteer Association”, paper presented to the 16th Annual Conference, |

| |Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action, December 1997, Indianapolis, Indiana. |

|1997, June |“‘The Racial Aspect of the Perennial Struggle for Human Rights’”: Anti-Racist Activism and Practice in Bertha’s |

| |Day and Ours”, Workshop Presentation, 12th Annual Conference, Bertha Capen Reynolds Society, Saint Louis, June |

| |1997. Co-presenter: Janet Nes, St. Francis College. |

|1996, November |Michael A. Dover, “Voluntary Organization Activity of Older Detroit-Area Residents: An Exploratory Study of |

| |Religious and Secular Voluntary Activity Reported in the 1993 Detroit Area Study.” Paper prepared for the |

| |Silver Anniversary Conference, A.R.N.O.V.A., New York City, November 1996. |

|1987, Fall |"Common values of E.A.P. and Labor," invited presentation, New York City Chapter, A.L.M.A.C.A., Fall 1987. |

|1985, October |Michael A. Dover and Daniel J. Molloy, "From Casework to Group Work to Community Organization: A Union Program |

| |Responds to Public Benefit Cuts." Paper presented at the N.A.S.W. National Symposium, Chicago, October 1985. |

|1985, May |Michael A. Dover and Sheldon Weinberg, "Direct Services vs. Program Planning: EAP Dilemma? Creating Intermediary |

| |Resources to Fill the Gap." Paper presented at the N.A.S.W. National Occupational Social Work Conference, Boston,|

| |May 1985. |

|1985, May |Paul Hufnagel, Elizabeth L. Torre, Michael A. Dover and Mark Gorkin, "Networking in the EAP Desert: Surviving the|

| |Rites of Passage." Paper presented at the N.A.S.W. National Occupational Social Work Conference, Boston, May |

| |1985. |

Academic Employment: Faculty and Teaching Positions

|2009-Present |Term Assistant Professor, School of Social Work, Cleveland State University |

| | |

| |Teach MSW courses in social welfare policy in the Joint MSW Program with the University of Akron and BSW courses in |

| |social welfare policy. Engage in field liaison visits to BSW and MSW students. |

|2007-2009 |Visiting Assistant Professor, School of Social Work, Cleveland State University |

| | |

| |Academic year 2007-2008 and 2008-2009 appointments. Teach MSW courses in social welfare policy in the Joint MSW |

| |Program with the University of Akron and BSW courses in social welfare policy. Developed new syllabus for SWK 300 |

| |using Segal text and SWK 647 using the Blau/Abramovitz text. Participated actively in the MSW and BSW self-study |

| |process, as it bears on social welfare policy. Engage in field liaison visits to BSW and MSW students. |

|2003-2007 |Assistant Professor and Director (8/03-6/06), Social Work Program, Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Social |

| |Work, Central Michigan University |

| | |

| |Assumed tenure track assistant professor position and began three-year term as Director in August 2003. The position |

| |as director included responsibility for administering an undergraduate social work program in an interdisciplinary |

| |department and teaching three courses per academic year (50% release time appointment). Appointment also involved |

| |half-time summer appointment. The faculty included 4.5 full-time equivalent faculty members, and the program had |

| |approximately 100 majors and major intents. Obtained departmental approval for three year plan for program development|

| |leading to 30 graduates by 2006-2007 and approximately 35-40 graduates by May 2008. While director, my teaching load |

| |included responsibility for teaching in the policy and research sequences and co-teaching introduction to social work. |

| |Prepared for CSWE site team visit November 2003. Wrote program response to CSWE site visit in Fall 2003. The program |

| |achieved initial four-year accreditation February 2004, with a request for a progress report. Wrote the Progress |

| |Report by Fall 2004. The progress report was accepted by CSWE in February 2005. Facilitated two successful national |

| |faculty searches, filling two tenure-track faculty positions commencing Fall 2004 and Fall 2005. Further developed |

| |advisory board; further developed system of advisement and admissions. Sought and obtained program, department and |

| |Dean approval in January 2006 for by-laws revisions enhancing social work program autonomy and providing for a detailed|

| |job description for the social work director position. Later that month, submitted a memorandum indicating that I |

| |would not be seeking a second term as director, in order that I could focus on my teaching and research. For |

| |2006-2007, taught two sections of research methods to BSW students and four sections of social welfare policy. In |

| |Spring 2007, requested and was granted a leave for the 2007-2008 academic year. Resigned from the faculty September |

| |2007 shortly after arriving at Cleveland State University. |

|2002, Fall |Graduate Student Instructor, Societal, Community and Organizational Processes |

| | |

| |Re-appointed to teach Social Work 502: Societal, Community and Organizational Processes a second time. This course is |

| |the second in a two-term H.B.S.E. sequence. Sole responsibility for teaching first-term M.S.W. candidates. |

| |Re-designed course based on existing course description and objectives; updated course bibliography, and integrated |

| |additional material on privilege, oppression and diversity. |

|2002, Spring |Graduate Student Instructor, Sociology 101: Social Psychology |

| | |

| |Lead two discussion sections of undergraduate students; attend lectures; graded papers and exams. Instructor: Prof. |

| |Karen Honeycutt. |

|2001, Fall |Graduate Student Instructor, Societal, Community and Organizational Processes |

| | |

| |Taught Social Work 502: Societal, Community and Organizational Processes. This course was the second in a two-term |

| |H.B.S.E. sequence. Sole responsibility for teaching 21 first-term M.S.W. candidates. Re-designed course based on |

| |existing course description and objectives; updated course bibliography. |

|2001, Spring |Graduate Student Instructor, Evaluation Research |

| | |

| |Taught Social Work 683: Evaluation Research. Sole responsibility for instruction of 25 fourth-term M.S.W. candidates. |

| |Course content included instruction in principles and methods of policy, program and practice evaluation research and |

| |needs assessment research. Primary course assignment was the completion of an approved evaluation research proposal. |

| |Developed extensive course-related bibliography. (During this term, also had an appointment as G.S.I. in the Detroit |

| |Area Study, please see Academic Employment: Research section. |

|1998, Fall |Graduate Student Instructor, Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, Univ. of Michigan |

| | |

| |Conducted two discussion sections for Sociology 303, Race and Ethnicity. Attend lectures by Dr. Michelle Harris-Reid. |

| |Graded papers and exams. |

|1997-1998 |Instructor, Eastern Michigan University School of Social Work |

| | |

| |Taught SWK 630/692, a yearlong research sequence to M.S.W. students in the part-time M.S.W. program. The Fall term |

| |course involved the development of a research proposal approved by the Human Subject Committee. The Winter term course|

| |was a seminar conducted while the students each carried out an independent, agency-based research project and produced |

| |an acceptable final research report. The research projects involved a range of qualitative and quantitative studies |

| |involving original data collection or the analysis of existing agency records. |

|1993, Summer |Graduate Student Instructor, Political Sociology, University of Michigan |

| | |

| |Sole responsibility for designing and teaching Introduction to Sociology Through Political Sociology to class of |

| |incoming first year undergraduates. |

|1991, Fall |Graduate Student Instructor, Social Work and Workplace, School of Social Work |

| | |

| |G.S.I. for Social Work and the Workplace, University of Michigan. Prof. Lawrence Root. Assisted with grading, |

| |discussion, taught one session. |

|1990-1991 |Faculty Advisor (part-time), Adelphi University School of Social Work Urban Center |

| | |

| |Served as part-time faculty adviser for fifteen undergraduate B.S.W. candidates at the New York City extension program |

| |of the School, the A.N.S.W.E.R. program. Responsible for academic advisement and oversight of fieldwork experience for|

| |this group of adult learners employed in public and voluntary human service agencies. |

|1989-1991 |Instructor (part-time), Social Policy, Fordham University School of Social Work |

| | |

| |Taught Foundations of Social Policy I and II Fall and Spring 1989-90; Oppression of Diverse Populations Fall 1990; |

| |Foundation of Social Policy I Spring 1991. |

|1985, Fall |Instructor (part-time), Southern University School of Social Work |

| | |

| |Taught Administration, Planning and Organizing, the core course in the macro practice sequence of the M.S.W. program. |

| |Also served as field instructor and as a member of the Advisory Board of this program during its early years. |

|1983, Fall; 1985, |Instructor (part-time), Tulane University School of Social Work |

|Spring | |

| |Taught Integrative Field Work Seminar in Occupational Social Work, Fall 1983. Co-taught (with Prof. Elizabeth Torre), |

| |Organizational Issues in the Workplace, Spr. 1985. |

Courses Taught

| |

|Social Welfare Policy, 2007-2009 (In Fall 2007, two sections of SWK 646 to MSW Students at Cleveland State University and University of Akron|

|using distance learning technology and alternating between sites, plus one section of SWK 300 to CSU BSW students. Spring 2008 taught two |

|sections of SWK 647 and one of SWK 300. Fall 2008 one section of SWK 646, one section of SWK 300 and one section of SWK 201, the first |

|policy course. Spring 2009 two sections of SWK 647 and one section of SWK 300. Fall 2009, one section each of SWK 300, 201 and 646. In all|

|terms, the remainder of my load was field liaison visits.) |

|Research Methods (SOC 300), Fall 2006, Fall 2006, Spring 2007 |

|Social Welfare Services and Policies I (SWK 250), F04, F05, S06, 2 sections in Fall 2006. |

|Social Welfare Services and Policies II (SWK 450), S04, S05, S07 |

|Intro. to Social Work (Co-Taught with Prof. Fred Allen, 2 sections Fall 2003, one Spring 2004) |

|Human Behavior in the Social Environment (University of Michigan, Fall 2001 and Fall 2002) |

|Social Psychology (Two discussion sections, Dept. of Sociology, Winter 2002)) |

|Social Policy (Fordham University, three terms, 1989-1991; CMU Fall 2003 and Spring 2004) |

|Evaluation Research (University of Michigan, Winter 2001) |

|Advanced Research Methods (Two term sequence, Eastern Michigan University, 1997-1998) |

|Survey Research Methods (Graduate Student Instructor, Detroit Area Study, 2000 and 2001) |

|Oppression-aware social work practice (Course on Oppression, Fordham University, 1990) |

|Macro practice: Community Organization (Macro practice, Southern University, Fall 1985) |

|Occupational Social Work (Tulane University, 1983 and 1985) |

|Generalist social work practice at the B.S.W. or M.S.W. foundation level |

|Political Sociology (University of Michigan, Summer 1993) |

|Sociology of Race and Ethnicity (G.S.I., Race and Ethnicity, U. of M., 1998) |

|Field instruction (Served as field instructor for Southern University; Hunter College; Temple University; Hosted faculty field unit from |

|C.U.S.S.W.) |

|Faculty liaison/advisement (Faculty advisor, Adelphi School of Social Work, 1990-1991) |

Professional Employment: Social Work and Community Practice

|2/93-12/97 (part-time)|Admissions Counselor, University of Michigan School of Social Work |

| | |

| |Following completion of work as a Research Associate (8/92-2/93) studying of admissions process, was employed by the |

| |Admissions Office as a part-time admissions counselor (with an appointment as a Graduate Student Service Assistant). |

| |Read and scored admissions applications. Reported to Assistant Dean for Student Services and Multi-Cultural Affairs |

| |Clarita Mays and to Assistant Director Tim Colenback (who is the current Assistant Dean). Worked on the implementation|

| |of modified rolling admissions procedures, affirmative action goals, and revised admissions criteria, including one of |

| |the first uses of “mission-oriented” criteria. Conducted admissions interviews where indicated. Made financial aid |

| |recommendations. Temporarily re-assigned to the Office of Professional Practicum 7/93-12/93 to work on developing |

| |placements, counseling students on choice of assignment, troubleshooting problems with placements, etc.. Reported in |

| |that capacity to Lily Jarman-Rohde, Director of Professional Practicum. Resumed admissions duties 1/94. |

|7/90—8/91 |Social Worker, DC-37 AFSCME Legal Services Fund |

| | |

| |Temporary position as social worker at a pre-paid legal services program for members of District 37, A.F.S.C.M.E. As |

| |part of the social work department, carried a diverse caseload of members having social service needs related to legal |

| |cases in areas of housing, family law, debt/bankruptcy, matrimonial. Presenting problems include public benefits, |

| |mental and substance abuse disorders, domestic violence, pending eviction, etc.. Provide advocacy; crisis |

| |intervention; evaluation and referral. Sheila Menashe, A.C.S.W., Director of Support Services. Resigned to commence |

| |full-time residency in the Doctoral Program in Social Work and Social Science at University of Michigan beginning |

| |September 1991. |

|9/89-4/91 |Instructor and Consultant, Fordham University School of Social Work |

|(part-time) | |

| |Taught Foundations of Social Policy I and II Fall and Spring 1989-90; Oppression of Diverse Populations Fall 1990; |

| |Foundation of Social Policy I Spring 1991. Also, during several months of this period, under supervision of Associate |

| |Dean Bertram Beck, produced Volume Three of the Self-Study, as part of the re-accreditation process for the Council on |

| |Social Work Education. Volume Three was a compendium of the School's syllabi (course descriptions, course outlines, |

| |course reading lists). Also produced a master bibliography of the materials included in the syllabi. The materials |

| |were prepared using optical character recognition, document conversion, Procite bibliographical database software and |

| |Wordperfect macros and word processing. |

|7/89-12/89 |Social Worker, Bucks County Housing Group, Langhorn, Pennsylvania |

| | |

| |Temporary position as social worker serving six homeless families residing in six-unit apartment building serving as a |

| |shelter. Provided casework with homeless couples with children and women with children referred from a short-term |

| |shelter for battered women. Also engaged in client and social policy advocacy, including staff/client participation in|

| |Housing Now! rally in Washington D.C.. This United Way agency operated three shelters for homeless families; one |

| |non-profit apartment unit; bridge housing program; housing assistance program; mortgage assistance program; alcohol and|

| |drug assessments; employment and training referrals. Initiated successful unionization drive for Non-Profit Agency |

| |Local, A.C.T.W.U., with the local subsequently ratifying a contract. |

| | |

|12/88-4/89 |Director, Faculty/Staff Assistance Program, University of Pennsylvania |

| | |

| |Directed in-house employee assistance program for 17,000 faculty and staff of the University. Program funded by Office|

| |of Human Resources through contract with School of Social Work. Reported to Dean Michael J. Austin. Directed overall |

| |program including assistant director; social worker; two temporary part-time social workers; student intern; support |

| |staff. Supervised grant providing for substance abuse education of faculty. Participated in three-day diversity |

| |workshop, and in committees on A.I.D.S. Awareness week and Drug-Free Workplace policy. |

| | |

| |Consulted with members of Advisory Committee. Provided direct services for approximately one dozen clients. Initiated|

| |monthly staff discussions alternating between three topic areas: program structure/policies; organizational change |

| |goals; practice issues. During January-March period, reviewed supervisory/case review procedures; discussed proposal |

| |to include information about the E.A.P. in disciplinary letters issued under the proposed new personnel procedures; and|

| |discussed the role of the E.A.P. in relation to organization development services. Proposed expansion of services to |

| |include information and referral capacity in elder care and child care. Submitted resignation effective April 21, 1989.|

| |Subsequently declined offers of director positions at a major medical center, a statewide family services association |

| |and a statewide senior citizens council, pursuant to plans to begin doctoral studies. |

|4/88-12/88 |Clinical Director, The Assistance Program, Philadelphia AFL-CIO |

| | |

| |Served as Clinical Director of a non-profit agency sponsored by the Philadelphia Central Labor Council, AFL-CIO and |

| |funded by United Way, Independence Blue Cross, and the Commonwealth. Edward F. Toohey, Board and AFL-CIO President; |

| |James J. Mahoney, Project Director; Thomas Murgitroyde, Program Director. |

| | |

| |Responsible for all clinical operations including evaluation and referral services available to the 200,000 members of |

| |the affiliates of the Philadelphia AFL-CIO and their families. Operate E.A.P. contracts with several area companies |

| |and a substance abuse treatment division serving the general community. Responsible for day-to-day administration of |

| |the overall program, including marketing, training and education, office administration, proposal development, contract|

| |administration, resource development, etc. |

| | |

| |Clinical supervision of Eugene Grevious, B.S.W., C.A.C. and Temple M.S.W. intern Florence Black (subsequently employed |

| |by the agency following my resignation). Brought agency into compliance with all state regulations for outpatient |

| |substance abuse treatment, successfully raising agency's status from provisional to full licensure. |

| | |

| |Developed curriculum for previously planned program of staff training for all area personnel of the Office of |

| |Employment Services of the Department of Labor. Conducted training in all area offices to facilitate referrals of |

| |claimants and job service clients for assessment and referral services. Wrote response to Request for Proposal to |

| |follow up training with a community-based, state-funded Re-Employment Assistance Program for claimants. Co-wrote grant|

| |proposal for funding of substance abuse program for residents of city shelter for the homeless. Both proposals |

| |subsequently funded. Resigned to accept position at University of Pennsylvania. |

| | |

|1/86-4/88 |Director, Medical/Psychiatric Social Work Service, Service Employees International Union Local 32B-J Health Fund, New |

| |York, NY |

| | |

| |Social work director at one of the earliest managed mental health care programs in the country. Administered an |

| |in-house, labor-management sponsored, health fund-based employee/member assistance program serving 175,000 members and |

| |dependents of Local 32B-J, Service Employees International Union (AFL-CIO), the home local of current AFL-CIO President|

| |John Sweeney. Reported to Eugene G. McCarthy, M.D., M.P.H., Medical Adviser. |

| | |

| |Supervised two social workers including Sara Millstein, MSW (now Ph.D.); three interns, and support staff. Coordinated |

| |in-service training of staff and interns. Provided oversight for a Columbia University faculty-based field unit. In |

| |direct practice, provided engagement, assessment, evaluation, short-term counseling, crisis intervention, referral and |

| |linkage to community-based treatment and services, for a wide-range of personal, marital and family concerns, but |

| |primarily for mental and substance abuse disorders. |

| | |

| |Formulated recommendations for improvements in mental health benefits. Exercised overall responsibility for clinical |

| |and administrative concurrent review of inpatient and outpatient mental health benefit utilization, which totaled |

| |nearly three million dollars annually. Regularly attended substance abuse rounds at the Paine-Whitney Clinic. In |

| |weekly consultation with Cornell psychiatrist Robert Millman, M.D., reviewed each course of treatment; authorized |

| |continued utilization above a fixed benefit amount; promoted quality of care; ensured appropriate discharge planning |

| |and continuity of care. Resigned for position at AFL-CIP in Philadelphia closer to my home in Bucks County, |

| |Pennsylvania. |

|1987 |Consultant, Manhattan Borough-Wide Interagency Council on Aging, Inc. |

| | |

| |Consulted on advocacy and education effort for citywide para-transit system for people needing alternative forms of |

| |transportation and related efforts to increase safe access to buses and subways. |

|9/80-1/86 |Regional Coordinator of Personal Services, National Maritime Pension and Welfare Plan, New Orleans, Louisiana |

| | |

| |Coordinated the first social worker-staffed employee assistance program in the State. Engaged in the generalist |

| |practice of social work in this union-based, labor-management employee assistance program for merchant seafarers. |

| |Established services in three areas: Retiree Program; Alcoholism Program; and services to unemployed and disabled |

| |members. Served over 1500 individual members in first three years, including over 75% of active and retired members. |

| |Completed program implementation after five years of development. Properly relieved by Henrietta Porter, M.S.W. (who |

| |continued the program for ten more years), I resigned to accept position at Local 32B-J Health Fund in New York. |

| |Reported to Daniel J. Molloy, D.S.W. in New York and coordinated program activities with the Port Agent. |

| | |

| |Alcoholism Program: Trained and supervised full-time union alcoholism program representative; developed network of |

| |referral sources; provided engagement, assessment, intervention and linkage to treatment; chose evaluation, treatment |

| |and follow-up resources; developed program and resource evaluation criteria; developed support network and monthly |

| |group of recovering members. Wrote alcoholism videotape script. |

| | |

| |Retiree Program: Developed continuum of services to retired pensioners. Planned, negotiated and monitored alternative |

| |health care system in cooperation with area hospital and clinic following closing of U.S.P.H. Hospital. Mailed |

| |reach-out packages to 850 retirees, obtaining a 66% response rate. Engaged 400 retirees in a long-range case |

| |management system with annual social service check-ups. Developed group work program for retirees, with monthly groups|

| |for disabled retirees, founding members and isolated elderly. |

| | |

| |Also: Built and staffed advisory board chaired by Mary Andrus-Overley, B.C.S.W. Developed field-work unit with Southern|

| |University. Coordinated with union and company staffs. Formed occupational social work and employee assistance |

| |networks among colleagues. Launched community advocacy organization in disability benefits area. Program |

| |representation on several board and committees. Social policy advocacy in area of unemployment compensation resulted |

| |in new State regulations permitting benefits to be received once fit for duty after leaving a vessel due to illness. |

| |Planned statewide conference on employee assistance programs while serving as President of A.L.M.A.C.A. |

|5/79-8/80 |Social Work Intern 1979-1980 and Summer Social Work Employee 1979 and 1980 |

| | |

| |Direct practice with working, disabled, and unemployed union members and their families. Provided brief contact, |

| |short-term services or long-range case management. Individual counseling; crisis intervention; engagement, assessment |

| |and referral in areas of public benefits, disability, alcoholism and drug abuse, mental health, law-social work clinic.|

| |Conceived, planned, and implemented out posting of social workers to union’s hiring hall to serve unemployed members, a|

| |program which remained in place for several years. Due to Summer employment, became dues paid member of District 65, |

| |U.A.W. Throughout this period, received weekly hour-long supervision from Beth Silverman, D.S.W., Director. |

|9/78-5/79 |Social Work Intern, Harlem Hospital Division of Child Psychiatry |

| | |

| |Psychosocial casework therapy with families of latency-aged children. Group work with adolescents. Collaboration with|

| |psychiatric staff. Coordination with community resources. Field Instructor: Rubina Eatmon, M.S.W. |

|9/77-6/78 |Family Assistant, N.Y.C. Board of Education Division of Special Education |

| | |

| |Outreach to un/under-served children with special needs. With MSW-supervision, did home visits, screening, referrals |

| |for evaluation. Coordination with school and evaluation personnel. Member, AFSCME. My BSW senior internship was also|

| |done in conjunction with this position. |

|4/77-10/77 |Counselor, Educational Alliance Project Contact Residence |

| | |

| |Full-time counselor at short-term group home residence for male and female adolescents. This was a 48 hours on, 96 |

| |hours off direct care position in which I was teamed with a female counselor. |

|9/76-9/77 |Social work intern, Community Service Society C.A.U.S.E. Program, New York, NY |

| | |

| |Casework with clients of all ages around housing, alcoholism, family life, education. This was a one-day a week |

| |pre-practicum, under the supervision of Merilee Posner, M.S.W.. Field liaison: Kay Coltoff, M.S.W. |

| | |

|1/75-1/77 |Housing Blockworker and Organizer, Chelsea Action Center, New York, NY |

| | |

| |Community worker in the tenant advocacy program of this Community Action Agency. Organized buildings; trained tenants;|

| |supported rent strikes; negotiated with landlords and city officials; made court appearances; planned community tenant |

| |conference. |

Academic Experience: Research

|6/00-8/03 |Full-time and Part-time Dissertation Research |

| | |

| |A total of nineteen months of full-time and twenty months of part-time dissertation research was conducted during this |

| |period. Supported by a Lincoln Land Institute Pre-Dissertation Fellowship, this included the Summers of 2000, 2001, |

| |and 2002. Full-time dissertation research was also conducted Winter term 2003, supported by a Rackham Dissertation |

| |Fellowship. |

| | |

| |During this time, part-time dissertation research was conducted while working concurrently as a half-time Graduate |

| |Student Instructor from Fall 2000-Fall 2002, with the exception of a full-time appointment in Winter 2001. (See G.S.I.|

| |position below and Academic Employment: Teaching). |

| | |

| |The dissertation was completed, defended, revised in order to comply with a request that it be shortened (it was |

| |reduced from 500 to 389 pages), and submitted in Summer 2003, with the certificate of completion issued by the Rackham |

| |School of Graduate Studies on August 18, 2003. |

|9/00-4/01 |Graduate Student Instructor, Detroit Area Studies of 2000 and 2001 |

| | |

| |Served as a half-time Graduate Student Instructor for Detroit Area Study Fall and Winter Term, 2000-2001. |

| | |

| |Fall 2000, G.S.I. for Prof. Nick Valentino, principal investigator of Detroit Area Study 2000. Assisted graduate |

| |students with analysis, presentation and paper preparation for data collected in the 2000 Detroit Area Study. |

| | |

| |Winter 2001, .25 G.S.I. for Prof. Bob Marans, principal investigator, Detroit Area Study 2001; Dr. Mick Couper, D.A.S. |

| |Director. Assisted team involved in data collection for D.A.S. 2001. |

|11/98-6/00 |Research Associate, Institute for Labor and Industrial Relations |

| | |

| |Regular year-round half-time position as research associate. Reported to Dr. Michael Belzer, Assistant Research |

| |Scientist. Prof. Lawrence Root, Director, I.L.I.R. Assisted in the design and implementation of research on the |

| |impact of trucking firm and truck driver characteristics on safety-related outcomes, funded by the Office of Motor |

| |Carriers of the Department of Transportation. Assisted with an intensive case study of a small sample of trucking |

| |firms. Applied expertise in bibliographical database development and management to perform a thorough literature |

| |search of literature on the trucking industry and on trucking and highway safety. Resigned after receipt of a Lincoln |

| |Land Institute Pre-Dissertation Fellowship, in order to do work full-time on dissertation in Summer 2000. |

|12/97-8/98 |Graduate Student Research Assistant, Child Welfare Training Grant |

| | |

| |Half-time position under the supervision of Prof. Kathleen Faller. Assisted in the development of training curriculum |

| |and manual for a federal grant, Interdisciplinary Training for Public Agency Workers and Supervisors to Improve Child |

| |Welfare Services. |

| | |

| |Substantively, my work involved bibliographical database development of literature concerning the ways that parental |

| |substance abuse, mental disorders, and domestic violence affect the prevalence and severity of child maltreatment. |

| | |

| |This position consolidated my skills in literature searches of Z239.50 compliant Library of Congress and University |

| |book and journal catalogs; online citation databases of journal articles indexes in the social, behavioral and health |

| |sciences; and bibliographical database management using Procite, EndNote and Reference Manager. |

|1992-1993 |Research Associate, University of Michigan School of Social Work |

| | |

| |Under the supervision of Prof. Edith Lewis, conducted a study of the admissions process of the School. In first phase,|

| |along with co-researcher Neil Guterman, read all admissions applications for the 1992 entering class of M.S.W. |

| |candidates. In second phase, designed and conducted simulated admissions process for a sample of 110 applicants, using|

| |recommended revisions to the admissions criteria and modified rolling admissions process. In final phase, produced |

| |report incorporating policy and procedural recommendations, which were revised and adopted by the Admissions Committee.|

| |Later, served five years as part-time Admissions Counselor until 1997 (see Professional Employment section). |

|1993-1995 |Detroit Area Study: Research Practicum and Survey Research Center volunteer |

| | |

| |Assisted in development and administration of survey questionnaire; in-person interviewing in Detroit area; individual |

| |data analysis for required paper; assistance with data cleaning; preparation of respondent report; assisted with |

| |preparation of longitudinal dataset using earlier survey results. Principal Investigator: Willard Rodgers. |

Research Interests

| |

|Aging and Human Needs |

|Generalist Social Work Practice |

|Social work and social welfare history |

|Nonprofit Sector Studies |

|Urban Affairs |

|Theory Development |

Research Related Grants and Awards

|2003 | Rackham One-Term Dissertation Fellowship, Winter 2003 |

|2003 | Rackham Dissertation Grant |

|2002 | Doctoral Research Award, Nonprofit and Public Management Center, University of Michigan |

|2000 | Pre-Dissertation Fellowship, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy |

|1998-1999 | ICOS Doctoral Student/Faculty Small Grants, Michael Dover and David Tucker, $3900 grant from the University of |

| |Michigan Interdisciplinary Center for Organizational Studies, supporting Toledo-based research. |

|1992-1997 | Fellowship in Applied Aging, National Institute of Aging |

Other Scholarly, Creative and Professional Activity

University, Departmental and Community Contributions (Recent)

|2008-2009: Treasurer (January-April) and Co-Treasurer (April 2008-November 2009), Social Welfare Action Alliance. |

|2003-2009: Member, Membership Committee, and Database Coordinator (through April 2008), Social Welfare Action Alliance. |

|2003-2008: Member, National Steering Committee, Social Welfare Action Alliance |

|2006-2007: Member, Library Committee, Central Michigan University |

|2006-2007: Member, Board of Directors, CMU Faculty Association (Affiliated with Michigan Education Association). |

|2006-2007: Member, Board of Directors, Michigan Association for Higher Education (Served as one of the representative of the CMU Faculty |

|Association). |

|2006-2007: Treasurer, National Conference Committee, Social Welfare Action Alliance |

|2003-2006: CMU United Way Steering Committee |

|2003-2006: Advisor, CMU Social Work Student Association |

|2003-2006: Advisor for 50% of Social Work Majors and Major Intents, scaled down to 33% by Spring 2006. |

|2003-2006: CMU Social Work Admissions Committee. |

|2003-2004: Developed website for Welcome in My BackYard, Inc. (), a Michigan Non-profit Corporation (officers Michael A. Dover|

|and Larry Fox), founded in 1997. |

Professional Meeting Chair, Moderator or Respondent

|2007, October |Chair and Session Organizer, Council on Social Work Education, Partnership Presentation, “Social Welfare Action |

| |Alliance: 2007 Katrina, Civil Rights and Activism Conference Follow-Up.” Presenters: Manoj Pardasani, Jull |

| |Murray, Susan Robbins, Candida Madgrigal, Michael Forster. San Francisco, California. |

|2005, November |“Co-Provocateur” (with Dr. Helen Morrow), “Pros and Cons of BSW Programs in Interdisciplinary Department,” |

| |Saturday evening Salon, Annual Conference, Baccalaureate Social Work Program Directors, November 2005, Austin, |

| |Texas. |

|2004, November |Chairperson, Studies in Community Involvement and Development (Community and Neighborhood Development Track), |

| |Session E6, November 11, 2004. Presenters: Sungsook Cho and David Gillespie; Ian Bedford; John G. Messner |

| |ARNOVA: Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action, Los Angeles. |

|2003, |Co-chair, breakfast roundtable discussion in March 2003: “Michael A. Dover and Henry Louis Taylor, Radical |

|March |thinking about the built environment: Do community development and large organizational growth undevelop the inner|

| |city?” at the Urban Affairs Association 33rd Annual Meeting, Cleveland. |

|1989, July |Moderator, "Progressives in the Professions," plenary panel presentation by Richard L. Edwards, NASW President, |

| |and Samuel Bowles, U-Mass. Prof. of Economics, at the Annual Conference, Bertha Capen Reynolds Society, Smith |

| |College, July, 1989. |

|1987, Summer |"Up From Poverty? The Welfare Reform Debate," Moderator, Panel Discussion, Annual N.A.S.W. Forum, New Orleans, |

| |July 1987. |

|1987, Summer |Moderator, Workshop on Labor and Social Work, Bertha Capen Reynolds Society, Smith College, July 1987. |

Officer or Committee Member of a Professional Organization (Recent)

|Committee member of a professional organization: Member, Legislative and Social Policy Committee, Michigan Chapter, N.A.S.W., 2006-2007. |

|Officer of a professional organization: Treasurer, Social Welfare Action Alliance (January-April 2008), and Co-Treasurer, Social Welfare |

|Action Alliance, April 2008-Present; Treasurer, 2007 National Conference Committee (for June 2007 Conference in New Orleans), Social |

|Welfare Action Alliance. |

|Officer of a professional organization: Member, Fall 2003 to present, National Steering Committee of the Social Welfare Action Alliance. |

|Officer of a professional organization: Member, 2006 National Conference Committee, National Conference and Meeting, Social Welfare Action |

|Alliance, Loyola University, June 16-17, 2006. |

|Officer of a professional organization: Co-Chair, National Conference Committee, 20th Anniversary Conference and Meeting, Social Welfare |

|Action Alliance, University of Toledo, July 2006. |

|Officer of a professional organization: Co-Chair (2005-July 2007) of the Membership Committee, Social Welfare Action Alliance. Re-organized|

|the database of the organization, eventually bringing it on-line as a server-based Filemaker Pro Database; continue to provide database |

|oversight; re-organized a list of 350 faculty network members at schools and departments of social work for the SWAA Faculty Network. |

|Committee Member of a Professional Organization: Member of the Local Planning Committee for the National Conference in Detroit (November |

|2004) of the Baccalaureate Social Work Program Directors Association. |

|Committee Member of a Professional Organization (2006-2007): Appointed by the Board of Directors of the Michigan Chapter of the NASW |

|Legislative and Social Policy Committee, Bill Long, MSW, JD, Chairperson. |

Membership in Academic and Professional Organizations (Present)

|1977-Present |Member, National Association of Social Workers; Chair, Membership Committee, and Member, Board of Directors, Louisiana |

| |Chapter NASW. 1982 – 1983; Chair, Occupational Social Work Committee, Louisiana Chapter, 1983-1984; Member, NASW Social|

| |Work Summit (representing Social Welfare Action Alliance), Michigan 2000-2001; Member, Legislative and Social Policy |

| |Committee, Michigan NASW, 2006-2007. |

|2003-Present |Member, Baccalaureate Social Work Program Directors Association (Attended conferences annually 2003-2006) |

|2003-Present |Member, Society for Social Work Research (Attended conferences annually 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009) |

|2000-Present |Member, Urban Affairs Association (Attended 2003 conference in Cleveland and 2008 conference in Baltimore) |

|2000-Present |Member, Social Science History Association |

|2008-Present |Member, Urban History Association (Attended Fall 2008 Conference in Houston) |

|1991-Present |Member, Association for Research on Non-Profit Organizations & Voluntary Action (Most recently attended in 2005 and |

| |2008) |

|1985-present |Founding Member, Social Welfare Action Alliance/Bertha Capen Reynolds Society. Co-Convener in 1985 of the Call to Join|

| |the Bertha Capen Reynolds Society. |

|1992-present |Member, American Sociological Association |

|1996-present |Member or Associate Member, Council on Social Work Education, 1996-Present. Have attended annually 2003-2008. |

|1996-present |Member, Association for Community Organization and Social Administration |

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