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Front row left to right: Jeannea Cobb, Cris Wildman, Ani Hernandez and Orlandria Smith
Back row left to right: Rachel Stough, Britney Brinkman, Alexa Johnson and Shacoya Bates

Photo by Hannah Johnston, senior English major

Point Park University Research Team Members

  • Britney Brinkman, Ph.D., director, Social Justice Psychology Research Team
  • Anne Rinehart, M.A.
  • Shacoya Bates
  • Orlandria Smith, M.A. 
  • Ani Hernandez
  • Rachel Stough
  • Sarah Edmiston
  • Anima Sheestha
  • Jeannea Cobb
  • Alexa Johnson

Research Collaborators

  • Kathi Elliott, DNP, MSW, CRNP, Executive Director, Gwen’s Girls
  • Sara Goodkind, Ph.D. School of Social Work, University of Pittsburgh
  • Deanna Hamilton, Ph.D., Counseling Psychology, Chatham University
  • Kandie Brinkman, Ph.D., Juan Diego Catholic High School
  • Susan Corbesero, Ph.D., The Ellis School
  • Allison Jedinak, Psy.D., Carnegie Mellon University Counseling Center
  • Andrea Joseph, Ph.D., University of Tennessee Knoxville
  • Amanda Cross, Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh, Office of Child Development
  • José Garth, Planned Parenthood of Western Pennsylvania
  • Katie Rose Horowitz, MPH, Planned Parenthood of Western Pennsylvania
  • Samantha Marino, M.A., Chatham University
  • Kelly Nestman Lockwood, Chatham University
  • Ashley Dandridge, M.A., Chatham University
  • Kate Meade, M.A., Chatham University
  • Patricia Donohue, Ph.D., M.S.
  • Meredith Deal, M.S.
  • Alannah Caisey, University of Pittsburgh
  • Rachel Coury, Chatham University

Current Research Projects


Redefining Resilience and Reframing Resistance: Evaluation of a Violence Prevention and Health Promotion Empowerment Program for Black Girls

Co-Investigators: Dr. Sara Goodkind, University of Pittsburgh and Dr. Kathi Elliott, Gwen’s Girls

This project is funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation through the Interdisciplinary Research Leaders Program.

In Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, Black girls are 11 times more likely than White girls to be referred to the juvenile court, while nationally, Black girls are referred three times as often. The proposed research will evaluate an empowerment-based program for Black girls designed to challenge negative perceptions, prevent violence, and improve their health via advocacy, restorative practices and participatory research.

This research aims to address the following questions via a mixed-methods, longitudinal and participatory approach:

  1. Can an empowerment-focused intervention prevent violence and improve Black girls’ health?
  2. Can this empowerment-focused intervention shift adults’ and girls’ narratives about Black girls? There is growing national awareness of the challenges faced by Black girls and now is an opportune time to document and disseminate evidence-based models that address these inequities. 

Redefining Resistance: Adolescent Girls’ Experiences of and Responses to Oppression

Co-Investigators: Dr. Deanna Hamilton and Dr. Kandie Brinkman

This project was funded by the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues.

The purpose of this study is to examine girls’ experiences of oppression, exploring ways that they experience, engage in meaning making and actively resist sexism. Further, the project examines the ways in which adult educators perceive girls’ resistance.

This study has a unique opportunity to examine possible changes over time by comparing data collected in this project to an initial six-year study in the same school system. In particular, this project will seek to explore whether and how girls’ resistance has shifted (or not) over time, with particular emphasis placed on exploring the role of social media in girls’ resistance.


Using an Intersectionality Framework to Examine Sexual Harassment Experienced by Black Girls

This project is funded by the FISA Foundation.

The goal of this project is to examine Black girls’ experiences of sexual harassment utilizing an intersectionality framework to better understand:

  1. The frequency and types of events;
  2. How Black girls respond to sexual harassment and how their responses are treated by adults
  3. The impact sexual harassment has on Black girls; and
  4. The ways gender, ethnicity and social class intersect to influence Black girls’ experiences of sexual harassment.

Comprehensive Sex Education in Western PA

Co-Investigators: José Garth and Katie Horowitz

This project is examining Black girls’ reproductive health as shaped by both the gendered and racial historical context and current social structures which shape their experiences. We bring together data related to access to comprehensive sex education, teen births, teen STI rates and neighborhood demographics (including ethnicity and economic resources) to map a picture of reproductive health access for Black girls. Our work is rooted in a theoretical model of reproductive justice, which extends mainstream reproductive rights arguments to examine the sociocultural contexts in which women engage in reproductive decision-making (Silliman, Fried, Ross, & Gutierrez, 2016).

Overall, we describe the need to examine Black girls’ reproductive health with a focus on systemic and structural factors influencing their access to resources and their sexual and reproductive health decision making.  


Girls, Activism, and Media Literacy

Co-Investigator: Susan Corbesero, Ph.D.

This project includes a series of collaborations with The Ellis School for Girls, exploring how girls and young women think about and become engaged in activism and examining the impact of media literacy training.


Pedagogical tools for Teaching Social Justice

The purpose of this project is to examine how graduate psychology students learn about key social justice constructs including multicultural competence, advocacy and intersectionality theory. One study examined students’ development of multicultural competence and commitment to activism and advocacy work following participation in an advocacy project. Another explores how students learn to apply intersectionality theory to clinical work.


For more information about the Social Justice Psychology Research Team at Point Park University, contact Britney Brinkman, Ph.D., at 412-392-8079 or bbrinkman@pointpark.edu.