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Congratulations to our alum, Dr. Devin English, on his recent faculty appointment!

Originally published here 

Devin English, Ph.D.

Newswise — NEWARK, NJ - The Rutgers School of Public Health is excited to announce that Devin English, PhD, will be joining the department of urban-global public health as an assistant professor in August.

Dr. English’s work focuses on eliminating health inequities faced by young racial and sexual minorities in the United States. In particular, his career as a researcher and educator is focused on investigating and addressing stigma as a source of health inequities for Black American youth, including young gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM).

Dr. English is a clinical community psychologist with a strong health disparities research program, a record of multi-year National Institute of Health (NIH) funding, expertise in advanced quantitative data analysis, and experience in teaching and mentoring.

Dr. English’s current NIH K01 award supports research in partnership with community-based organizations in New York City and Newark to investigate intersectional discrimination, coping, and bio-psychosocial outcomes among young Black GBMSM. The project will culminate in the production of a novel strengths-based mHealth prevention intervention.

“Dr. English is the latest in a series of exceptional faculty members who we have recruited in the last 18 months as we build the new Rutgers School of Public Health,” says dean Perry N. Halkitis. “His work is not only scientifically rigorous, innovative, and relevant, but also in sync with our School’s commitment to social justice and health equity.”

“Dr. English’s research aligns perfectly with the commitments of the department and the school to increase equity and social justice,” comments Leslie Kantor, chair of the department of urban-global public health. “We look forward to the contributions that Dr. English will make to the School, to New Jersey, and to the emerging understanding of how stigma affects health and how systems can and must change.”

“When I decided to pursue a career in research, teaching, and mentoring it was because I believed in the potential for academia to contribute to social change and reduce health inequities by addressing sources of systemic and intersectional oppression. I am so excited to be joining the department of urban-global public health under Dr. Kantor’s leadership, which is prioritizing this type of systemic change through education, advocacy, community engagement, and empowerment,” said Dr. English

Dr. English joins the Rutgers School of Public Health from Hunter College, where he is an assistant research professor. He completed his graduate studies at George Washington University, receiving his PhD in Clinical-Community Psychology. Dr. English completed his postdoctoral research fellowship at the Center for HIV Educational Studies and Training (CHEST).

 

Stories of Her Life: Alumna’s Global Journey in Journalism Returns Her to the Familiar Confines of GW

Naomi Spinrad, CCAS BA ’68, ESIA MA ’86, has had a career in journalism that has taken her around the world and provided adventures: dropping out of a helicopter onto an aircraft carrier in the Mediterranean, briefly steering an aircraft carrier and spending more time than she can count on military ships. It’s been a life far away from her undergraduate and graduate years at GW, which she started at age 15 then came back to in her early 30s.

But for a recent story, these two worlds came together. Now a contract producer with the State Department’s Foreign Press Center, Spinrad connected a team of journalists from Cameroon with Sacred Huff, LAW ’19, a GW student with a powerful story about growing up in the foster care system and earning a scholarship to study law at GW, with a mission to change the system she knows from the inside. An advertisement for GW’s Power & Promise scholarship initiative in GW’s alumni magazine spotlighted Huff and her journey, which caught the eye of Spinrad.

“I read almost anything I stumble across,” Spinrad says.

When she saw Huff’s story, Spinrad was engaged in the Cameroon project. It involves bringing a team of journalists to the U.S., with State Department funding, to report on the ground about issues important to Cameroon that also advance the U.S. interest in promoting democracy. This project focuses on women’s empowerment and civic engagement.

Who better, thought Spinrad, than a young African-American woman from a difficult upbringing who’s using her education to improve the lives of others in her situation? Huff is one of a group of American women whose stories will be broadcast in three segments in 2019 on Canal 2, the leading independent channel in Cameroon with an electronic reach across Africa.

“The hope is that it will activate young Cameroonian women to be more involved in political, business and civic life in Cameroon,” says Spinrad, “and that it will ultimately help participatory democracy there.”

Spinrad has her own story to inspire. She moved away from her New York City home and started GW as a 15-year-old freshman, having skipped fourth and eighth grades and, she says, been especially good at standardized tests. She graduated with a degree in psychology when she was just 19. Although the degree did little to predict her future as a globetrotting journalist, it did serve an important role in her development.

“I have lots of good feelings about GW,” she says. “For me it was a great place to move from the middle teenage years to early adulthood, intellectually, socially, and emotionally.”

She started what became a 26-year career at NBC News as a researcher. By year six, she was a producer. At age 31, she returned to GW to earn a Master’s degree in Latin American Studies, which NBC paid for while Spinrad also worked full-time. She found great inspiration from professors including Cynthia McClintock in political science, James Robb in Spanish literature, and Marvin Gordon in geography. But the workload strained her.

“I spent vacation one year writing my thesis and barely avoided giving up because it was tough working full-time and going to school,” she says.

In a 45-year career in journalism, she’s won an Edward R. Murrow award for NBC’s coverage of NATO’s 1999 bombing of Belgrade, Serbia and a national Emmy Award for the network’s report on the 1988 U.S. Navy shootdown of an Iranian passenger plane, which killed 290 civilians. She calls her 10 years as producer at the Pentagon the most satisfying and memorable, pointing to series she did on African-Americans in the military, HIV/AIDS in the military, and women in the military. Then there were all those high-speed adventures that counted as work.

“It’s been pretty cool,” she says in her quiet, understated way.

– Dan Simmons