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Two professors to receive Distinguished Research Professor title

This year, York is honouring sociology and women’s studies Professor Pat Armstrong and psychology Professor Leslie Greenberg with its highest award, Distinguished Research Professor, for their outstanding contributions to the University through research.

The title will be conferred on Armstrong at the Spring 2010 Convocation on June 16 at 10:30am and on Greenberg during the June 17 ceremony at 10:30am.

A Distinguished Research Professorship is awarded to a professor who has demonstrated scholarly achievement by sustained publication or other recognized and accepted demonstrations of sustained authoritative contributions to scholarship.

Right: Pat Armstrong

Armstrong, who is appointed to graduate programs in health, political science, science & technology, sociology and women's studies, holds a Canada Health Services Research Foundation/Canadian Institutes of Health Research Chair in Health Services. She is also a professor of sociology in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies and an executive member of the York Institute for Health Research and the Graduate Program in Health Policy & Equity.

She recently received Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) funding through the Major Collaborative Research Initiatives program to identify promising practices for understanding and organizing long-term residential health care. Armstrong's project seeks to learn from and with other countries to understand the approaches, structures, accountability practices and ownership arrangements that create conditions prompting respectful and dignified treatment for both residents and caregivers.

Another SSHRC-funded research project looks at the risks nurses face in health care, while a Canadian Institutes of Health Research-funded project compared the workplace conditions and levels of violence faced by long-term care workers to those in Nordic countries.

She has authored, co-authored or co-edited over 20 books, including Women’s Health: Intersections of Policy, Research and Practice (Canadian Scholars' Press Inc., 2008), Critical to Care: The Invisible Women in Health Services (University of Toronto Press, 2008) and Universal Health Care: What the United States Can Learn from the Canadian Experience (The New Press, 1999).

Armstrong chairs Women & Health Care Reform, a working group that crosses the Centres of Excellence for Women's Health, and is acting co-director of the National Network on Environments & Women’s Health. She is currently a principal of the Ontario Training Centre in Health Services & Policy Research, a board member of the York Institute for Health Research, and has served as both chair of the Department of Sociology at York and director of the School of Canadian Studies at Carleton.

In addition, Armstrong has served as an expert witness in more than a dozen cases heard before bodies ranging from the federal court to federal human rights tribunals on issues related to women’s health-care work and to pay equity. 

Left: Leslie Greenberg

Greenberg (PhD ’76), appointed to the Graduate Program in Psychology, is among the pioneers and is primary developer of emotion-focused therapy (EFT) for individuals and for couples, which is based on the findings that emotions influence thought and behaviour. It is a psychotherapy technique that promotes the resolution of unpleasant emotions by working with them rather than suppressing or avoiding them. Greenberg is interested in couple and individual therapy using EFT, as well as examining how people deal with unresolved emotions and how that affects their ability to forgive. In recent years, he has used EFT to help couples when one person has had an affair. He is also interested in how EFT can help people with depression.

EFT is now recognized as evidence-based treatment for depression as well as couple conflict, and there is also growing evidence of its effectiveness for trauma, interpersonal problems and eating disorders. In a 2002 study, Greenberg and his colleagues studied individuals who had suffered injuries ranging from emotional to physical abuse and found that those who were treated with EFT had much better results than individuals who were treated with psycho-educational therapy. Greenberg has devoted over 20 years to EFT research and has conducted EFT workshops for therapists interested in learning his theory and technique around the globe. Closer to home, he is providing training in EFT for professionals from around the world at the York University Psychology Clinic.

Greenberg has won many awards, including the Award for Excellence in Professional Training from the Canadian Council of Professional Psychology Programs, the Carl Rogers Award from the American Psychological Association Division 32, the Distinguished Career Award from the Society for Psychotherapy Research and the Professional Award for Distinguished Contributions to Psychology as a Profession from the Canadian Psychological Association.

His professional publications include more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, 89 book chapters and some 17 books, including Emotion-Focused Couples Therapy: The Dynamics of Emotion, Love and Power (American Psychological Association, 2008), Case Studies in Emotion-Focused Treatment of Depression: A Comparison of Good and Poor Outcome (American Psychological Association, 2007), Emotion-Focused Therapy for Depression (American Psychological Association, 2005) and Emotion-Focused Therapy: Teaching Clients to Work Through Their Feelings (American Psychological Association, 2001)

He is a founding member of the Society for the Exploration of Psychotherapy Integration and the Society for Constructivism in Psychotherapy, and a past president of the Society for Psychotherapy Research.

In addition, he is on the editorial board of many psychotherapy journals, including the Journal of Psychotherapy Integration and the Journal of Marital & Family Therapy.

For more information about Distinguished Research Professorships, visit the Faculty of Graduate Studies Web page.

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