Election Results

American Psychological Association Elects Drexel Professor Donald N. Bersoff as 2013 President

November 3, 2011 | Lisa Bowen | Original Article

WASHINGTON—Donald N. Bersoff, PhD, JD, Drexel University professor and national expert on legal and ethical issues in mental health, has been elected 2013 president of the American Psychological Association.

Bersoff serves on the faculties of Drexel’s psychology department and Earle Mack School of Law, where he directs the JD/PhD program in law and psychology. He edited the landmark book Ethical Conflicts in Psychology, now in its fourth edition, and has written more than 100 publications and papers on the interaction of law, psychology and public policy.

“As APA president, my top initiatives will be to have psychologists take the lead in serving the mental health needs of military personnel, veterans and their families; ensure that we train clinicians to work with increasingly diverse clientele; and do whatever is necessary to attract and retain academicians and scientists,” Bersoff said.

Bersoff was the APA’s first general counsel, from 1979 to 1989, during which he authored 50 briefs filed in the U.S. Supreme Court and lower federal and state courts. His work provided social science evidence relevant to issues such as sex stereotyping, women’s and adolescents’ reproductive rights, hospital privileges for psychologists, admissibility of psychological expertise, jury decision making, privacy rights of the LGBT community, children’s testimony and rights of the severely mentally disabled.

A native of New York, Bersoff received his PhD in 1965 from New York University and his JD in 1976 from Yale Law School. He served as an Air Force clinical psychologist from 1965 to 1968, with two years in Southeast Asia.

His other academic positions included developing the nation’s second joint law and psychology program, offered by Johns Hopkins University and the University of Maryland School of Law, as well as faculty posts at the University of Georgia’s College of Education and Ohio State University.

Elected to three terms on the APA Council of Representatives, he served as president of the American Psychology-Law Society (APA Division 41) and chairman of the Association of American Law Schools Section on Mental Disability Law.

He received the Presidential Citation for Distinguished Service to APA in 2000. His other awards include Distinguished Contributions to Psychology as a Science and Profession and the Ethics Educator of the Year from the Pennsylvania Psychological Association; the Arthur Furst Ethics Award from the Pacific Graduate School of Psychology; and, the Lifetime Contribution Award from the American Psychology-Law Society.

The American Psychological Association, in Washington, D.C., is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States and is the world’s largest association of psychologists. APA’s membership includes more than 154,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 54 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance psychology as a science, as a profession and as a means of promoting health, education and human welfare.

 

 

1000 Words for Progress

I seek the presidency because I am concerned about the serious realities that face our association and our members.  I am concerned about the plight of our independent clinicians who can hardly afford to practice.  I am concerned about restrictions in funding for research, graduate education, and internships.  I am concerned about the impact of technology on patient privacy.  I am concerned that ispanic we are not doing enough about the increasingly cultural diversity of those with whom we work.  I am concerned that we are losing our scientifically-oriented members and failing to attract newly-minted doctorates.  I am concerned that at times we have abandoned our moral, scientific, and ethical integrity for inappropriate purposes.  Sagging morale and sagging membership have affected our financial stability and spirit. Read more >>

My Candidacy:

Why I Am Running

 I did not seek to be nominated and I am running against formidable candidates. But I am taking my candidacy very seriously. Although I have something of a reputation for modesty, my colleagues who have run in the past for the APA presidency tell me that this is no time for such an attribute So, please find below, why I think that for this time in APA’s history, I am the best candidate to lead APA for the next three years. The President of APA should represent all of psychology. The President must have the knowledge and experience to promote psychology in all its forms to the world at large and to work within APA to foster the success of all its constituencies. Toward those goals, I bring the following attributes:
. Read more >>