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Ruth Enid Zambrana

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Distinguished University Professor, The Harriet Tubman Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Director, Consortium on Race, Gender and Ethnicity
Affiliate Professor, American Studies
Affiliate Faculty, Latin American and Caribbean Studies Center

Consortium on Race, Gender and Ethnicity 

4111 Susquehanna Hall

301-405-0451

4117 Susquehanna Hall
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Research Expertise

Educational and Social Inequalities
Equity
Gender
Health
Higher Education
Institutional Discrimination
Intersectionality
Latinx Studies
Race/Ethnicity
Reproductive Health
Reproductive Justice
Sexuality and Reproductive Health Violence
Women

Curriculum Vitae

Dr. Zambrana is a Distinguished University Professor at the University of Maryland Harriet TubmanDepartment of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Director of the Consortium on Race, Gender and Ethnicity and has a secondary appointment as Professor of Family Medicine at the University of Maryland, Baltimore, School of Medicine.   She is a medical and community sociologist and an elected member of the National Academy of Medicine (NAM).  Her scholarship applies a critical intersectional lens to structural inequality and racial, Hispanic ethnicity, and gender inequities in population health and higher education trajectories. Dr. Zambrana has published widely on health and racial inequity in her major field concentrations: women’s health, maternal and child health, socioeconomic health disparities and life course impacts on health and mental well-being of  historically underrepresented minorities.  Her most recent book is Toxic Ivory Tower: The Consequences of Work Stress on the Health of Underrepresented Minority Faculty (2018). She is the recipient of numerous awards, including the 2011 Julian Samora Distinguished Career Award by the American Sociological Association, Sociology of Latino/as Section, the 2013 American Public Health Association (APHA) Latino Caucus, Founding Member Award for Vision and Leadership, the 2021 APHA Lyndon Haviland Public Health Mentoring Award, and the 2021-22 Distinguished Research Fellow at the Latino Research Institute University of Texas, Austin.