Mar 26, 2008
Counseling Professor Anneliese Singh Receives National Award

Writer: Catharin Shepard, 706/583-0811, catharin@uga.edu
Contact: Anneliese Singh, 706/542-5341, asingh@uga.edu


Anneliese Singh is an assistant professor in the department of counseling and human development services. |
Counseling professor Anneliese Singh will receive the 2008 ‘Ohana Award from the Counselors for Social Justice (CSJ) for her work in affirming diversity and social justice.
Singh, an assistant professor in the College of Education’s department of counseling and human development services, is the third faculty member in her department to win the national award in the past four years. Deryl Bailey, an associate professor, and Pamela O. Paisley, professor and head of the school counseling program, have both previously received the award.
Singh researches multicultural counseling and social justice; qualitative methodology with historically marginalized groups; advocacy to end child sexual abuse in South Asian communities; feminist theory and practice; lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender counseling; Asian-American counseling and psychology issues; and empowerment interventions with trauma survivors.
In 2007, she received the Ramesh and Vijaya Bakshi Community Change Award for her outstanding leadership and social activism in metro Atlanta’s South Asian community. Singh joined the UGA faculty in 2007. She earned her Ph.D. from Georgia State University.
The ‘Ohana Honors Award, created by Michael D'Andrea and Judy Daniels, counselor education faculty at the University of Hawaii-Manoa in 1994.
© 2006 University of Georgia
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