Amanda L. Baden, Ph.D. is a transracial adoptee, adopted internationally from Hong Kong. She believes in examining issues of race, privilege, oppression, and power in adoption to promote ethical and sensitive practice with transracial adoptees and their families.
Amanda is a Professor and the Doctoral Program Director in the graduate Counseling Program at Montclair State University (NJ) and she is a licensed psychologist with a practice in New York City. She focuses her research and clinical practice on the adoption kinship network, transracial/international adoption issues, racial and cultural identity, and multicultural counseling competence. Amanda was an editor of The Handbook of Adoption: Implications for Researchers, Practitioners, and Families. Amanda serves on the Board on the New York State Board of Psychology, the Advisory Board for the Rudd Adoption Research Program (UMass-Amherst), the Board of Creating a Family, as Senior Fellow for the National Center on Adoption and Permanency, as chair of the Adoption Initiative Biennial Conferences held in NYC, and as a Senior Fellow for the former Donaldson Adoption Institute.
Amanda is a Fellow for the Counseling Psychology Division 17 of the American Psychological Association (APA). She was awarded the John D. Black Award in 2014 from the APA and Division 17 for the Outstanding Practice of Counseling Psychology, Outstanding Graduate Advisor for Montclair State University in 2017, and Angel in Adoption in 2005.
Amanda lives in Manhattan in New York City. Visit her website for more information.
