Charles R. Figley, PhD
Kurzweg Distinguished Chair in Disaster Mental Health, Distinguished Professor
Biography
Dr. Figley was named the Paul Henry Kurzweg Chair in Disaster Mental Health at Tulane University in 2008 when he joined the faculty as its senior professor from Florida State University. At FSU Professor Figley served as the senior professor in the area of trauma and Director of the PhD Program in Marriage and Family. Dr. Figley brought his Traumatology Institute to Tulane, which was recognized as the best program of its kind by the University Continuing Education Association in 2000.
Dr. Figley attained full professor status in 1983 at Purdue University with a joint appointment as professor of psychological sciences. Dr. Figley established the renowned Purdue University Family Research Institute and established two Journals as Founding Editor, the Journal of Psychotherapy and the Journal of Traumatic Stress. In 1995 became Founding Editor of Traumatology, the International Journal. Also Dr. Figley is founding editor several book series (e.g., the Innovations in Psychology book series with Taylor & Francis).
Currently, Dr. Figley is editor of the oldest book series on trauma (established in 1978), the Psychosocial Stress Book Series. He has published more than 200 scholarly works including 26 books and 130 refereed journal articles. Collectively, his work reports on more than 37 research projects focusing primarily on traumatic stress and resiliency of individuals, families, and communities. This latest book published in 2013, First Do No Self Harm: Understanding and Promoting Physician Stress Resilience (Oxford University Press) was highly praised by the American Psychological Association. He is working on two more books with contracts from Columbia University Press and Oxford University Press, both to be published in 2019.
He is an elected fellow of five of the leading national professional associations and received many other honors in recognition for his scholarship.
Dr. Figley is the recipient of numerous lectureships and other honors throughout the world including Northern Ireland, South Africa, England, Australia, Canada, and universities through the United States. He was awarded a senior Fulbright Research Fellowship to conduct research in Kuwait in 2004 and follow-up on work that was started in 1992, shortly after the liberation from and end of the occupation by Iraq. In 2004, Dr. Figley was named lifetime Alumni Fellow by the Pennsylvania State University, the highest honor awarded to its graduates. Most recently, Figley was honored by the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York with an honorary degree in June 2014 in recognition of his career-long achievements in social justice for the traumatized.
Areas of Expertise
- Child Advocacy, Protection, and Welfare
- Collective Trauma
- Community Violence
- Disaster Mental Health
- Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion
- Family Counseling
- Historical Oppression and Marginalization
- Justice and Corrections
- Military and Veteran Social Work
Education
- PhD in Human Development, Pennsylvania State University
- MS in Human Development, Pennsylvania State University
- BS in Human Development, University of Hawaii
Selected Publications
- Russell, M. C. & Figley, C. R. (2021). Psychiatric Casualties: Why and How the Military Ignores the Full Cost of War. New York: Columbia University Press.
- McKinley, C. E., Spencer, M. S., Walters, K. & Figley, C. R. (2020). Mental, Physical and Social Dimensions of Health Equity and Wellness among U.S. Indigenous Peoples: What is Known and Next Steps. New York: Taylor & Francis.
- Figley, C. R., Yarvis, J., & Thyer, B. (Eds). (2020). Combat Social Work: Applying the Lessons of War to the Realities of Human Services. New York: Oxford University Press.
- Mollica, R. F., Agosin, M., Figley, C. R., Sajnani, N., Mollica, C. & Solomon, H. (2018). A Manifesto: Healing a Violent World. Tunbridge Wells, England: Solis Press.
- Boscarino, J. J., Figley, C.R., Adams, R.E., Urosevich, T.G.,.Kichner, H.L., and Boscarino, J.A. (2020). Mental health status in veterans residing in rural versus nonrural areas: results from the veterans’ health study. Military Medical Research. https://mmrjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40779-020-00272-6.
- Adams, R.E., Hu, Y., Figley, C.R., Urosevich, T.G., Hoffman, S.N. Kirchner, H.L., Dugan, R.J., Boscarino J. J., Withey, C.A., Boscarino, J. A. (2020). Risk and protective factors associated with mental health among female military veterans: Results from the Veterans’ Health Study. BMC Women’s Health. https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.2.18132/v1.
- McKinley, C. E. Spencer, M., Walters, K., & Figley, C. R. (2020). Mental, Physical and Social Dimensions of Health Equity and Wellness among U.S. Indigenous Peoples: What is Known and Next Steps. Editors and introduction to the associated special issue in the Journal of Ethnic & Cultural Diversity in Social Work, 30 (1/2). (Advanced online publication on June 8, 2020), Doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/15313204.2020.1770658.
For more publications, see Dr. Figley's CV, his page on ResearchGate, or his website.
Selected News & Media
- Treating Psychiatric Combat Casualties. (2021). Psychiatric Times.
- Troops, vets deserve better when it comes to mental health, Tulane professor says in new book. (2021). Tulane Today.
- PTSD problems persist as new Tulane program offers hope. (2021). WVUE-TV, Fox 8 New Orleans.
- What will the world be like after the pandemic? Clues to the future of work, travel or vaccines. (2021). Univision.
- How to Help Someone With PTSD. (2021). UpJourney.
- Tulane trauma expert part of program on mental health in the military. (2021). Tulane Today.
- Healthcare Burnout and How Universities are Helping Equip Students. (2021). ThriveGlobal.
- Compassion fatigue is real for health-care workers on the front line of coronavirus fight. (2021). NOLA.com.
- 6 Ways to Combat Pandemic Compassion Fatigue. (2021). Healthline.
- When Safety Is Shattered. (2021). Psychology Today.
- COVID-19 Decision Fatigue: What It Is and How to Deal With It. (2021). Healthline.
- When the War Comes Home. (2020). Psychiatric Times.
- Author Spotlight. (2020). Tulane Libraries.
- Feeling Exhausted? Maybe It's Empathy. (2020). Discover.
Selected Funding
- 5/10/20-5/09/25 National Institutes of Health, PAR17-496, Interventions for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention in Native American Populations
- Chukka Auchaffi’ Natana: The Weaving Healthy Families Program to Promote Wellness and Resilience and Prevent Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse and Violence (1R01AA028201-01)
- Consultant, $2,658,129
- 7/1/15-6/30-19 Department of Defense Geisinger Health Research Insitute
- Boscarino DoD: Mental Health Disorders, Suicide Risk, and Treatment seeking among Formerly Deployed National Guard and Reserve Service Member seen in Non-VA Facilities, Joseph Boscarino
- Principle Investigator, $873,700
- 10/15-9/30/20 National Institutes of Health
- Vanlandingham Katrina+10 Project, Rev
- Principle Investigator, $6,800,000
- 11/1/11-10/31/14 Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Funded
- Disaster Resilience Leadership Capacity Building and Assessments
- $5,000,000
Community Involvement
- Tulane University, Chair, Research Committee, 2012-present
- Assisting with recovery organizations involved in emergency operations (e.g., Hurricane Sandy, shooting incidence), 2008-present.
- Pro bono consultation and training for the US Military, Germany, 2003-present.
- SAIL High School Parent Teacher Student Organization, President Elect 2001-present
- Formation of the Bosnia Green Cross Projects to provide humanitarian assistance to families of loved ones working in Bosnia, 1995-present.
- Member, Tallahassee Crisis Response Team, 1991-present