First Edition Authors
Bandy X. Lee, M.D.,
M.Div., is a forensic psychiatrist on the faculty of Yale School
of Medicine. In addition to her clinical work in correctional and
public-sector settings, she served as Director of Research for the
Center for the Study of Violence. She then co-founded Yale’s Violence
and Health Study Group and leads an academic collaborators group for the
World Health Organization. She has consulted with governments to set up
violence prevention programs internationally and within the U.S., as
well as helped to initiate reforms at New York City’s Rikers Island
Correctional Center. She teaches at Yale Law School and Yale College.
She published more than 100 peer-reviewed articles and chapters, edited
eleven academic books, and authored the textbook Violence
(Wiley-Blackwell, 2019). She held an ethics conference on the
professional obligation to society and published its proceedings in
The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump: 27 Psychiatrists and Mental
Health Experts Assess a President (Macmillan, 2017).

Robert Jay Lifton, M.D., is Lecturer in Psychiatry at Columbia University and Distinguished Professor Emeritus of John Jay College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. A leading psychohistorian, he is renowned for his studies of the doctors who aided Nazi war crimes and from his work with survivors of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. He was an outspoken critic of the American Psychological Association’s aiding of government-sanctioned torture and is a vocal opponent of nuclear weapons. His research encompasses the psychological causes and effects of war and political violence and the theory of thought reform.
Judith Lewis Herman, M.D., is Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. She is a renowned expert in the traumas of interpersonal violence and author of the now-classic Trauma and Recovery. She is a co-founder of the Victims of Violence Program in the Department of Psychiatry at Cambridge Health Alliance, a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, and the recipient of numerous awards, including the Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.
Philip Zimbardo,
Ph.D., Professor Emeritus at Stanford University, is a scholar,
educator, and researcher. Zimbardo is perhaps best known for his
landmark Stanford prison study. Among his more than five hundred
publications are the best seller The Lucifer Effect and such
notable psychology textbooks as Psychology: Core Concepts, 8th
edition, and Psychology and Life, now in its 20th edition. He is
founder and president of the Heroic Imagination Project
(heroicimagination.org), a worldwide nonprofit teaching people of all
ages how to take wise and effective action in challenging situations. He
continues to research the effects of time perspectives and time
perspective therapy.
Rosemary Sword is
codeveloper of Time Perspective Therapy and coauthor of The Time
Cure: Overcoming PTSD with the New Psychology of Time Perspective
Therapy (in English, German, Polish, Chinese, and Russian);
The Time Cure Therapist Guidebook (Wiley, 2013); Time
Perspective Therapy: Transforming Zimbardo’s Temporal Theory into
Clinical Practice (Springer, 2015); Time Perspective
Theory (Springer, 2015); Living and Loving Better with Time
Perspective Therapy (McFarland, 2017); and Time Perspective
Therapy: An Evolutionary Therapy for PTSD (McFarland,
forthcoming). Sword and Zimbardo write a popular column for
PsychologyToday.com and contribute both to Appeal Power, a
European Union online journal, and to Psychology in Practice, a
new Polish psychological journal. Sword is also developer of Aetas: Mind
Balancing Apps (www.discoveraetas.com).
Craig Malkin,
Ph.D., is author of the internationally acclaimed Rethinking
Narcissism, a clinical psychologist, and Lecturer for Harvard
Medical School with twenty-five years of experience helping individuals,
couples, and families. His insights on relationships and narcissism have
appeared in newspapers and magazines such as Time, the New
York Times, the Sunday Times, Psychology Today,
Women’s Health, the Huffington Post, and Happen
Magazine. He has also been featured multiple times on NPR, CBS
Radio, and the Oprah Winfrey Network channel, among other stations and
shows internationally. Dr. Malkin is president and director of the
Cambridge, Massachusetts-based YM Psychotherapy and Consultation Inc.,
which provides psychotherapy and couples workshops.
Tony Schwartz is
the author of several books, including The Art of the Deal, which
he coauthored with Mr. Trump. He also wrote The Power of Full
Engagement: Managing Energy, Not Time (with Jim Loehr) and
The Way We’re Working Isn’t Working, a New York Times and
Wall Street Journal bestseller. He is also CEO and founder of The
Energy Project, a consulting firm that helps individuals and
organizations solve intractable problems and add more value in the world
by widening their worldview.
Gail Sheehy,
Ph.D., as author, journalist, and popular lecturer, has changed
the way millions of women and men around the world look at their life
stages. In her fifty-year career, she has written seventeen books,
including her revolutionary Passages, named one of the ten most
influential books of our times. As a literary journalist, she was one of
the original contributors to New York Magazine and, since
1984, has written for Vanity Fair. A winner of many awards, three
honorary doctorates, a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012 by Books for a
Better Life, she has regularly commented on political figures, including
in her acclaimed biography of Hillary Clinton, Hillary’s Choice.
Lance Dodes, M.D.,
is a Training and Supervising Analyst Emeritus at the Boston
Psychoanalytic Society and Institute and retired Assistant Clinical
Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. He is the author of
many academic articles and book chapters describing a new understanding
of the nature and treatment of addiction, and three books: The Heart
of Addiction; Breaking Addiction; and The Sober
Truth. He has been honored by the Division on Addictions at
Harvard Medical School for “Distinguished Contribution” to the study and
treatment of addictive behavior, and been elected a Distinguished Fellow
of the American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry.
Michael J. Tansey,
Ph.D. (www.drmjtansey.com), is a Chicago-based clinical
psychologist, author, and teacher. He is a graduate of Harvard
University (A.B., 1972, in personality theory) and Northwestern
University Feinberg School of Medicine (Ph.D., 1978, in clinical
psychology). In addition to his full-time practice, he was an assistant
professor teaching and supervising students, interns, residents, and
postdoctoral fellows. He has been in private practice for more than
thirty-five years, working with adults, adolescents, and couples. Along
with a coauthored book on empathy and the therapeutic process, he has
written numerous professional journal articles as well as twenty-five
blogs for the Huffington Post.
David M. Reiss,
M.D., attended Northwestern University (chemical/biomedical
engineering; medical school) and has maintained a private psychiatric
practice in California since 1982. Dr. Reiss has evaluated/treated more
than twelve thousand people; has served as interim medical director of
Providence Hospital (Massachusetts), and has recently been associated
with the Brattleboro Retreat (Vermont). He is a California-qualified
medical examiner and a member of professional organizations, including
the Society for the Exploration of Psychotherapeutic Integration, the
Sports Lawyers Association, and the International Psychohistory
Association. Dr. Reiss has appeared in all media formats addressing
clinical issues and psychological aspects of social and political
phenomena.
James A. Herb, M.A., Esq., has practiced law in Florida for forty years. He is a Florida Supreme Court-certified circuit court mediator, a certificated arbitrator, and a professional member of the National College of Probate Judges. He is author of four chapters in Florida law practice books and has chaired or spoken at more than fifty legal seminars.
Leonard L. Glass, M.D., M.P.H., is a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst in Newton, Massachusetts. He is an associate professor of psychiatry (part time) at Harvard Medical School and a senior attending psychiatrist at McLean Hospital. Dr. Glass was president of the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute and was a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association until he resigned in protest of the Goldwater rule in April 2017. He has written professionally about ethics, the psychology of men, psychiatric risks of large groups, and boundary issues in psychotherapy. He has also authored popular articles about road rage and spectator violence at sporting events.
Henry J. Friedman, M.D., is an associate professor of psychiatry, Harvard Medical School (part time), on the editorial boards of Psychoanalytic Quarterly, the American Journal of Psycho- analysis, and the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, with main interests in the therapeutic action of psychoanalysis and analytic psychotherapy. Friedman is also chair of the “Meet the Author” at the biannual meetings of the American Psychoanalytic Association.
James Gilligan,
M.D., is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Adjunct Professor
of Law at New York University. He is a renowned violence studies expert
and author of the influential Violence: Our Deadly Epidemic and Its
Causes, as well as Preventing Violence and Why Some
Politicians are More Dangerous than Others. He has served as
director of mental health services for the Massachusetts prisons and
prison mental hospital, president of the International Association for
Forensic Psychotherapy, and as a consultant to President Clinton, Tony
Blair, Kofi Annan, the World Court, the World Health Organization, and
the World Economic Forum.
Diane Jhueck, L.M.H.C., D.M.H.P., has operated a private therapy practice for several decades. In addition, she performs mental health evaluations and detentions on individuals presenting as a danger to self or others. In a previous social justice career, she was a women’s specialist at the United Nations, in New York City. She founded the Women’s and Children’s Free Restaurant, an empowerment project that has been in operation for thirty years. She also founded the People’s AIDS Project and was an assistant regional manager for Feeding America. She has directed agencies addressing food aid, domestic violence, apartheid, low-income housing, and LGBTQ rights.

Howard H. Covitz, Ph.D., A.B.P.P., has combined the practice of psychoanalysis in the suburbs of Philadelphia with a variety of other interests. He has taught university-level mathematics, psychology, and biblical characterology (1968–2011), was a training analyst at the Institute for Psychoanalytic Studies and the Institute for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapies, and its director (1986-98). He also ran a school for disturbed inner-city adolescents in the 1970s. His Oedipal Paradigms in Collision (1998, reissued in 2016) was nominated for the Gradiva Book of the Year Award. His connectedness to his wife, grown children, and grandchildren motivates his writing and thinking.
William J. Doherty, Ph.D., is a professor of family social science and director of the Minnesota Couples on the Brink project and the Citizen Professional Center at the University of Minnesota. In May 2016, he authored the Citizen Therapist Manifesto Against Trumpism, which was signed by more than 3,800 therapists. After the election, he founded Citizen Therapists for Democracy (www.citizentherapists.com). He is a senior fellow with Better Angels, an organization devoted to depolarizing America at the grassroots level. He helped pioneer the area of medical family therapy, and in 2017 he received the American Family Therapy Academy Lifetime Achievement Award.
Betty P. Teng, M.F.A., L.M.S.W., is a trauma therapist in the Office of Victims Services of a major hospital in Lower Manhattan. A graduate of Yale College; UCLA’s School of Theater, Film, and Television; and NYU’s Silver School of Social Work, Ms. Teng is in psychoanalytic training and practices at the Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy. She is also an award-winning screenwriter and editor whose credits include films by Ang Lee, Robert Altman, and Mike Nichols.
Jennifer Contarino Panning, Psy.D., is a licensed clinical psychologist and owner of Mindful Psychology Associates, a small group practice in Evanston Illinois. She received her doctorate in clinical psychology from the Chicago School of Professional Psychology in 2003, and completed training at Northern Illinois University and Northwestern University. Panning opened her private practice in 2004, and now has three psychologists and a postdoctoral fellow on staff. She specializes in the treatment of mood disorders, eating disorders, college student mental health, stress, and trauma using an integrative approach of cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness, and dialectical behavioral therapy, and is also trained in clinical hypnosis.
Harper West, M.A.,
L.L.P. (www.HarperWest.co), is a licensed psychotherapist in
Clarkston, Michigan. She graduated from Michigan State University with a
degree in journalism and worked in corporate communications, later
earning a master’s degree in clinical psychology from the Michigan
School of Professional Psychology. Ms. West is the developer of
self-acceptance psychology, which challenges the biological model of
mental disorders and offers a new paradigm that reframes emotional
problems as adaptive responses to fear, trauma, shame, and lack of
secure attachment. Her self-help book Pack Leader Psychology won
an Independent Book Publishers Association Ben Franklin Award for
Psychology.
Luba Kessler, M.D., is a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst in private practice. Born in the post-Holocaust displacement in the Ural Mountains, she has lived and received her education in the Soviet Union, Poland, Italy, and the United States. That journey included essential lessons in history, geography, culture, art, and politics. Postgraduate training and faculty appointments followed, in psychiatry at Hillside Hospital on Long Island, and in psychoanalysis at NYU Psychoanalytic Institute (now the Institute for Psychoanalytic Education, affiliated with NYU Medical School). She is editor of Issues in Education for The American Psychoanalyst of the American Psychoanalytic Association.
Steve Wruble,
M.D., is an accomplished singer-songwriter and storyteller. He
has won the Moth StorySLAM, for which he uses a pseudonym in SLAM
competitions. Dr. Wruble is also a board-certified child and adult
psychiatrist in private practice in Manhattan and Ridgewood, New Jersey,
at the Venn Center. He specializes in anxiety disorders, trauma, and
attention-deficit hyperactivity disorders. He attended medical school in
his hometown of Memphis, Tennessee, and did his general psychiatry
residency at Northwestern University. He did his child psychiatry
fellowship at the Institute for Juvenile Research at the University of
Illinois at Chicago, where he was chief fellow.
Thomas Singer, M.D., is a
psychiatrist and Jungian psychoanalyst practicing in San Francisco. In
addition to private practice, he has served on Social Security’s Hearing
and Appeals Mental Impairment Disability team. His interests include
studying the relationships among myth, politics, and psyche in The
Vision Thing and the Ancient Greece, Modern Psyche series. He is
the editor of a series of books exploring cultural complexes, including
Placing Psyche, Listening to Latin America, Europe’s
Many Souls, The Cultural Complex, and a book in
preparation on Asia. He is the current president of National ARAS, an
archive of symbolic imagery that has created The Book of Symbols.
Elizabeth Mika, M.A., L.C.P.C., of Gifted Resources in Northern Illinois (in the Chicago area), received her degree in clinical psychology from Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan, Poland. She specializes in assessment and counseling of gifted children and adults. Her professional interests include creativity and mental health, learning differences and learning styles, multiple exceptionalities, and emotional and moral development.
Edwin B. Fisher,
Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist and a professor in the
Department of Health Behavior in the Gillings School of Global Public
Health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is a past
president of the Society of Behavioral Medicine and editor of
Principles and Concepts of Behavioral Medicine: A Global Handbook
(Springer, 2017). In addition to community and peer support in health
and health care, asthma, cancer, diabetes, smoking cessation, and weight
management, he has written on concepts of psychopathology, including
depression and schizophrenia, and on the relationships between mental
illness and physical disease.
Nanette Gartrell,
M.D., is a psychiatrist, researcher, and writer who was formerly
on the faculties of Harvard Medical School and the University of
California, San Francisco. Her forty-seven years of scientific
investigations have focused primarily on sexual minority parent
families. In the 1980s and ’90s, Dr. Gartrell was the principal
investigator of groundbreaking investigations into sexual misconduct by
physicians that led to a clean-up of professional ethics codes and the
criminalization of boundary violations. The Nanette K. Gartrell
Papers are archived at the Sophia Smith Collection, Smith
College.
Dee Mosbacher, M.D.,
Ph.D., is a psychiatrist and Academy Award–nominated documentary
filmmaker who was formerly on the faculty of the University of
California, San Francisco. As a public-sector psychiatrist, Dr.
Mosbacher specialized in the treatment of patients with severe mental
illness. She served as San Mateo County’s medical director for mental
health and was senior psychiatrist at San Francisco’s Progress
Foundation. The Diane (Dee) Mosbacher and Woman Vision Papers are
archived at the Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College. Dr. Mosbacher’s
films are also contained within the Smithsonian National Museum of
American History collection.
Noam Chomsky,
Ph.D., is Professor Emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, which he joined in 1955. Dr. Chomsky has written and
lectured widely on linguistics, philosophy, intellectual history,
contemporary issues, international affairs, and U.S. foreign policy, and
is the recipient of numerous honorary degrees and awards. Among his more
recent books are The Essential Chomsky; How the World
Works; 9-11: Was There an Alternative?; On Western
Terrorism: From Hiroshima to Drone Warfare (with Andre Vltchek);
What Kind of Creatures Are We?; Why Only Us: Language and
Evolution (with Robert C. Berwick); Who Rules the World?;
and Requiem for the American Dream.
