Brent Dean Robbins, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology
Point Park University
Brent Dean Robbins, Ph.D., is a professor of psychology and director of the Psy.D. in Clinical Psychology at Point Park University. Over the years, Dr. Robbins has served in various leadership roles at the University, including chair of the Department of Psychology, program director of the M.A. in Community Psychology, undergraduate coordinator for the B.A. in Psychology, chair of the Graduate Programs Committee, chair of the Core Outcomes Assessment Committee, and chair of the Internal Review Board (IRB).
He is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and past president of the Society for Humanistic Psychology (Division 32 of APA). He has served on the Board of the Society for General Psychology (Division 1 of APA) and the Society for Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology (Division 24 of APA), and he is an active member of the Society for Personality & Social Psychology (Division 8 of APA) and the Society for the Psychology of Religion & Spirituality (Division 36 of APA). He also serves on the editorial board of various peer-reviewed academic journals, including Journal of Humanistic Psychology, The Humanistic Psychologist, Qualitative Psychology, Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology, Integratus and International Journal of Transpersonal Studies. He is co-founder and editor-in-chief of the interdisciplinary journal, Janus Head, and an author of The Medicalized Body and Anesthetic Culture: The Cadaver, the Memorial Body and the Recovery of Lived Experience (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018). He is also a fellow of the Beatrice Institute.
Dr. Robbins' areas of expertise include, for example, humanistic, existential and interpersonal approaches to psychotherapy and diagnosis, the phenomenology of emotion and embodiment, coping with death and dying, neurophenomenology, enactive cognition, metabletic phenomenology, cultural therapeutics, mindfulness, mystical and religious experiences, indigenous psychologies, the cultural history of mental illness, resiliency, virtue theory, human dignity, objectification of women and nature, psychology of non-violence and scapegoat theory.