Victim Researcher Profile

Researcher Photo

Jennifer Joy Freyd

 EMAIL JENNIFER    
    

STATE

California

INSTITUTION

University of Oregon

TITLE

Professor

EDUCATION

PhD

DISCIPLINE

Psychology

YEARS OF EXPERIENCE

More than 20 years

BIO

Bio: Jennifer J. Freyd, PhD, is a researcher, author, educator, and consultant. She currently is a Fellow, 2018-19, at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University and a a Professor of Psychology at the University of Oregon. Freyd is a widely published and nationally-renowned scholar known for her theories of betrayal trauma, institutional betrayal, institutional courage, and DARVO. She researches these topics in the context of institutional behavior, sexual violence, discrimination on the basis of gender, minority status, and sexual orientation, and also disclosures of abuse. She received her PhD in Psychology from Stanford University. The author or coauthor of over 200 articles and op-eds, Freyd is also the author of the Harvard Press award-winning book Betrayal Trauma: The Logic of Forgetting Childhood Abuse. Her most recent book Blind to Betrayal, co-authored with Pamela J. Birrell, was published by John Wiley, with seven additional translations. In 2014, Freyd was invited two times to the U.S. White House due to her research on sexual assault and institutional betrayal. Freyd has received numerous awards including being named a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow, an Erskine Fellow at The University of Canterbury in New Zealand, and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. In April 2016, Freyd was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Society for the Study of Trauma & Dissociation. Freyd currently serves as the Editor of The Journal of Trauma & Dissociation.

VICTIMIZATION FOCUS

SPECIAL POPULATIONS

American Indian and Alaska Native (tribal) victims, Child victims, LGBTQ victims

RESEARCH EXPERTISE

Data collection, Quantitative studies, Quasi-experimental studies

VICTIM RESEARCH EXPERIENCE

Data collection, Quantitative studies