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Get to know more about Antioch's talented faculty by exploring the links below. You'll find biographies of faculty members that feature their backgrounds, interests and perspectives on teaching at Antioch.
To read about other faculty who teach in the psychology program, click here. To check out other Antioch faculty, visit Our Faculty.
Core Faculty
Ned Farley, Ph.D., The Union Institute & University. Ned Farley is a licensed mental health counselor in private practice who focuses on existential psychology, phenomenology, adult development, gay/lesbian/bi/transgendered issues in therapy and domestic violence.
Associate Faculty
Lisa Lynch, Ph.D., Union Institute & University. Lynch is the program coodinator. The focus of her dissertation, Restoring the River: An Ecopscychological Novel and Contextual Essay, was on the use of fiction to explore and illustrate environmental issues surrounding a river in central Oregon. Lynch is the former interim chair of the Integrative Studies in Psychology program and has taught ecopsychology at Antioch Seattle and for Union Graduate school. She is looking forward to continuing to offer her courses in ecopsychology and exploring the many ways this perspective can inform the lives and professions of her students.
Adjunct Faculty
George Callan, B.A., Immaculate Heart College; M.A., Santa Clara Univesity; Ph.D., Pacifica Graduate Institute. Callan is a depth psychologist and licensed marriage and family therapist whose clinical and academic interests include archetypal psychotherapy, dream work and initiatory and alchemical processes as they relate to the individual, communal and global psyche. She practices psychotherapy and mentorship in Seattle where she works with individuals, couples and families and supervises therapists and interns in the fields of clinical and depth psychology. Visit her website for more.
Patricia H. Hasbach, Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh. Hasbach is a licensed professional counselor and clinical psychotherapist with a private practice in Eugene, Oregon. Hasbach has a post-doctoral M.A. in Ecopsychology from Naropa University and incorporates ecopsychological practices with traditional theory to address various issues in adults and couples. She has consulted extensively with hospitals, schools, businesses, and community environmental activist groups. Her academic interests focus on the processes and mechanisms that underlie the development of an environmental sensibility and on what can be called the "rewilding of the human species." She is a member of the editorial board of the journal, Ecopsychology, and is currently working on two books for MIT Press related to ecopsychology and the rediscovery of the wild.
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