Professor
Social Sciences Division
Professor
Faculty
Humanities Division
Feminist Studies Department
Latin American & Latino Studies
Dolores Huerta Research Center for the Americas
Social Sciences 2
Room 259
Psychology Faculty Services
M.A., Ph.D., University of Missouri-Columbia
B.A., Michigan State University
The application of scholarly knowledge to policy change and solidarity work; Gender; Social Justice; Sexual objectification; Transnational Feminism
Courses taught include: Women's Lives in Context; Women's Bodies and Psychological Well-Being; and Transnational Feminism and Psychology.
Shelly Grabe’s research examines sociostructural components of women’s rights violations and social justice in the context of globalization. In partnership with grassroots women’s organizations in Nicaragua and Tanzania, Professor Grabe’s work intends to center the voices and activism of marginalized women who have limited structural power in society. She has used a multimethod approach from within psychology to provide a currently missing, but necessary link between transnational feminism, the discourse on women’s human rights and globalization, and the international attention given to women’s “empowerment” to help inform strategies and interventions that can contribute to social change for women. She uses frameworks informed by feminist liberation psychology, human rights discourse, decolonial feminism, and social justice to organize her research, teaching, and outreach. She identifies as a scholar-activist and is committed to exploring how the study of gendered social structures can be practically relevant and foster social change.
She is currently working on three transnational projects exploring: (1) the role of land ownership in empowerment processes and gender-based violence in Nicaragua, (2) land ownership, civic participation, and violence among women in Tanzania, and (3) the role of the grass-roots social movement in promoting justice for women in Nicaragua.
Research Interests
-Social movements, activism, and justice
-Women’s resistance/activism/empowerment
-Human rights
-Globalization/neoliberalism
-Transnational intersectionality/Decolonial feminism
-Structural inequities
-Body objectification