Nicole Berry
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Assistant Professor
Biography:
Research Interests:
Her doctoral research was based on a
two-year ethnographic study in Sololá, Guatemala evaluating attempts by local,
national and international health workers to improve emergency obstetric care
in the district hospital. She explored this interventions at all levels—from
the historical environment that catalyzed expert support around emergency
obstetric care, to the assumptions about maternal mortality and pregnant women
embedded in the intervention. She investigated why the intervention failed to
decrease alarmingly high rates of maternal mortality among local Mayan women. Her
field study provides significant insight into why, after 20 years, the international
community continues to make little headway in decreasing high rates of maternal
mortality in developing countries, and points to alternative approaches to
improve the success rates of interventions both in emergency obstetrics and
Safe Motherhood. Dr. Berry
is currently working on a book manuscript based on her dissertation data. Her post-doctoral project examines how the
global process of migration can impact family relationships and, in turn, how
family dynamics can affect adolescent reproductive health behaviour and
outcomes. Proyecto PADRES (PARENTS’ Project) engaged mothers from the newly
established Latino community in Durham,
NC in a community-based
participatory research process to investigate why so many Latino adolescents
drop out of school and abandon their families before 18 years of age. The
research data was used to develop an educational curriculum for parents of
Latino teens and preteens. The curriculum is based on empowerment education
techniques and covers six different topics—from communication to discipline to
letting go of counterproductive beliefs—to help promote what community-members
consider healthy, functioning families. In the future, Dr. Berry
would like to take her community-based research skills back to Guatemala to engage
indigenous communities in finding solutions to the problem of high maternal
mortality rates.
Teaching Interests:
Teaching Interests: Dr. Berry currently teaches Health, Gender and
Development. Her other areas of interest include Global Health, Reproductive
Health, Maternal and Child Health, Theory in Health Promotion, Empowerment and
Participatory Methods.
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BA, International Studies
MA, Anthropology
PhD, Anthropology
Postdoctoral studies in community-based participatory research, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill
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