Carolyn Kagan

Last updated
Carolyn Kagan
Born
Meopham, Kent
Alma mater North East London Polytechnic, University of Oxford
Scientific career
Fields Community psychology
Institutions Manchester Metropolitan University
Thesis Cognitive aspects of social skills training  (1981)
Doctoral advisor Michael Argyle

Carolyn Kagan is a British community psychologist and social activist.

Contents

Life and work

Carolyn Morag Kagan grew up in Meopham, Kent. After working as a residential social worker in Scotland, she went to North East London Polytechnic, graduating with a degree in Psychology in 1974. She then obtained a DPhil in Social Psychology from Wolfson College, University of Oxford.

In 1976, she was appointed to the Department of Psychology at Manchester Polytechnic (subsequently Manchester Metropolitan University), proceeding through the ranks of Lecturer, Senior Lecturer, Principal Lecturer and Professor. She is a qualified social worker and counselling psychologist. For ten years, she was Director of the Research Institute for Health and Social Change at MMU, which established a reputation for socially engaged research. She is currently Emerita Professor at MMU and a visiting professor at Edge Hill University. [1]

As a community psychologist, she has worked closely with various community groups and been involved in various forms of social activism. She has, until recently, been a Director of Just Psychology CIC (www.justpsychology.co.uk), From Generation to Generation (https://web.archive.org/web/20180815165023/http://www.fromgenerationtogeneration.org/), and Friends of Hough End Hall (www.houghendhall.org). She is also a trustee of the Richard Benjamin Trust (www.richardbenjamintrust.co.uk), a member of the Steady State Manchester collective (https://steadystatemanchester.net), and Chair of Chorlton Voice (Chorlton Civic Society) and Chorlton Arts Festival

Publications

See also Carolyn Kagan's page on academia.edu https://mmu.academia.edu/CarolynKagan

Awards

References

  1. "Professor Carolyn Kagan" . Retrieved 6 May 2017.
  2. "Three new Honorary Fellows elected" . Retrieved 6 May 2017.