The Social Work Library staff extends a warm congratulations to the Professor Emeritus Elaine Pinderhughes for her award from the CSWE. Professor Pinderhughes is the 2012 recipient of the CSWE’s Significant Lifetime Achievement in Social Work Education Award. Her scholarship has provided social workers with a framework for culturally competent practice. Here is a sampling of her more recent publications:
Pinderhughes, E. (2008). In McGoldrick M., Hardy K. V. (Eds.), Black genealogy revisited: Restorying an african american family. New York, NY, US: Guilford Press.
Pinderhughes, E. (2010). Culture and the self: On paradoxes and contradictions. Women & Therapy.Special Issue: A Minyan of Women: Family Dynamics, Jewish Identities, and Psychotherapy Practice, 33(3-4), 447-448. doi:10.1080/02703149.2010.484684
Hopps, J. G., Pinderhughes, E., & Lowe, T. B. (2007). A journey through the prism of race: An evolution of generational consciousness. Journal of Ethnic & Cultural Diversity in Social Work, 16(3-4), 227-252. doi:10.1300/J051v16n03_19
Pinderhughes, E. (2004). The multigenerational transmission of loss and trauma: The african-american experience. In F. Walsh, M. McGoldrick, F. Walsh & M. McGoldrick (Eds.), Living beyond loss: Death in the family (2nd ed.). (pp. 161-181). New York, NY, US: W W Norton & Co.
Pinderhughes, E. (2004). My struggles to understand racism and injustice: How I kept my sanity as a pioneer in multicultural practice, teaching, research and consultation. Reflections: Narratives of Professional Helping, 10(1), 26-38.