
Bio
Imani is a Doctoral student in the Department of Behavioral, Social, and Health Education Sciences at Emory University’s Rollins School of Public Health. Broadly, her interests lie at the intersection of mental health, structural racism, and the built environment. She is particularly interested in harnessing the strengths that exist within marginalized communities to improve mental health outcomes for Black and Brown youth. Imani is currently working under the co-mentorship of Dr. Doug Livingston and Dr. Briana Woods-Jaeger, where she utilizes community-based participatory research, mixed-methods approaches, and policy analysis- with a core aim to improve mental health outcomes.
Imani holds a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from North Carolina A & T State University and a Masters of Public Health from the Department of Maternal, Child, and Family Health at UNC- Chapel Hill. Prior to completing her MPH, Imani served as a Peace Corps Community Health Volunteer for two years in Mozambique.
Areas of Interest
- Adolescent Health/Child Health
- Community Based Research
- Health Policy
- Maternal and Child Health
- Mental Health
- Built Environment
- Health Disparities
- Public Health Policy
Education
- Bachelor of Arts in Psychology, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
- Masters of Public Health, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill