Skip to content Skip to navigation

Participants: Creating Citizenship: Youth Development for Free and Democratic Society June 17-19, 1999


International Panel Members


Monika Buhl
Research Scientist in Political Socialization, Mannheim University


Ed Cairns, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology, University of Ulster at Coleraine


Nicholas Emler, Ph.D.
Professor of Social Psychology, Oxford University


Barbara Fratczak-Rudnicka, Ph.D.
Professor of Social Science, University of Warsaw


Orit Ichilov, Ph.D.
Professor of Education, Tel-Aviv University


Hans Oswald, Ph.D.
Professor of Education, Potsdam University


National Panel Members


Patricia Avery, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Social Studies Education, University of Minnesota


Constance Flanagan, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Agriculture and Extension Educations, Penn State
University


Cynthia Garcia Coll, Ph.D.
Professor of Education, Psychology and Pediatrics, Brown University


Fayneese Miller, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Education and Human Development, Brown University


John Modell, Ph.D.
Professor of Education and Human Development, Brown University


Diana Owen, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Political Psychology, Georgetown University


Martin Sanchez-Jankowski, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Sociology, University of California at Berkeley
em>


Richard Shweder, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology, University of Chicago


Judith Torney-Purta, Ph.D.
Professor of Human Development, University of Maryland


James Youniss, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology, Catholic University of America


Center on Adolescence Panel Members


Richard Brody, Ph.D.
Professor Emeritus of Political Science, Stanford University


Nancy Brown, Ph.D.
Research Associate, Child and Adolescent Development, Palo Alto Medical Foundation


Steve Chaffee, Ph.D.
Janet M. Peck Professor of International Communication, Stanford University


William Damon, Ph.D.
Director, Stanford Center on Adolescence


Sanford Dornbusch, Ph.D.
Reed-Hodgson Professor Emeritus of Human Biology, and Professor of Sociology and Education, Stanford University


Carl Feinstein, M.D.
Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Stanford University


Shirley Feldman, Ph.D.
Senior Research Scientist, Human Biology, Stanford University


Mary Kiely, Ph.D.
Academic Program Officer, Human Biology, Stanford University


John Krumboltz, Ph.D.
Professor of Education and Psychology, Stanford University


Teresa LaFromboise, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Education, Stanford University


P. Herbert Leiderman, M.D.
Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry, Stanford University


James Lock, M.D., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Stanford University


Eleanor Maccoby, Ph.D.
Barbara Kimball Browning Professor Emerita of Psychology, Stanford University


Susan Okin, Ph.D.
Professor of Political Science, Stanford University


Francisco Ramirez, Ph.D.
Professor of Educations, Stanford University


Rob Reich, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Political Science and Ethics in Society, Stanford University


Cecilia Ridgeway, Ph.D.
Professor of Sociology, Stanford University


Robert Roeser, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Education, Stanford University


Jim Thompson, M.A., M.B.A.
Director, Coaching Leadership Initiative, Stanford University


Invited Special Guests


Karen Hein, M.D.
President, William T. Grant Foundation; Clinical Professor of Pediatrics, Epidemiology and Social Medicine, Albert Einstein School of Medicine


Ron Herring, Ph.D.
Executive Director, California International Studies Project


Ian McCarthy
Co-Founder and Director, Open Voice


Leslie Medine
Founder and Director, HOME Project


Lonnie Sherrod, Ph.D.
Executive Vice President, William T. Grant Foundation


Miranda Yates
Executive Director, Covenant House


Planning and Implementation Committee


Shannon Casey-Cannon
Pre-Doctoral Fellow, Center on Adolescence


Joseph Gardner
Pre-Doctoral Fellows, Center on Adolescence


Rosemary Gonzalez
Pre-Doctoral Fellow, Center on Adolescence


Melanie Moore, Ph.D.
Post-Doctoral Fellow, Center on Adolescence


Carol Wong, Ph.D.
Post-Doctoral Fellow, Center on Adolescence