University of Calgary

Angelique Jenney

  • Wood's Homes Research Chair
  • Associate Professor

Research Interests

Trauma and Violence:

Infant, Children and Adolescents:

Health, Mental Health and Wellness:

Scholarship of Teaching and Learning:

Practice Approaches:

Currently Teaching

Profile

Angelique Jenney, PhD, RSW, is an Assistant Professor and the Wood’s Homes Research Chair in Children’s Mental Health in the Faculty of Social Work at the University of Calgary. Wood’s Homes is a multi-service, non-profit children’s mental health centre based in Calgary. Dr. Jenney has over 20 years’ experience in intervention and prevention services within the child protection, children’s mental health and violence against women sectors

Research and Scholarly Activity

Dr. Jenney’s research and program development has been devoted to understanding and responding to the impact of violence in families. Her research and practice interests include: family-based interventions for childhood trauma; child protection responses to family violence cases; the experience of mothering in the context of violence/trauma; and the use of simulation in reflective approaches to teaching and training social work students.

Professional and Community Associations

2020 - Member, National Infant & Early Mental Health Hub Leadership Team, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON.

2020 - ACSW Clinical Committee, Faculty of Social Work, Calgary, AB

2019 - Consultation for the Office of the Child and Youth advocate (death review report), Edmonton, AB. https://www.ocya.alberta.ca/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/MandRev_April-Sept2018.pdf

2018 - ACSW Discipline Committee, Calgary, AB

2018 - Wood’s Homes Research Advisory Committee, Calgary, AB

2018 - Member of Calgary Counselling Centre’s Provincial Research Advisory Committee, Calgary, AB

2017 - Member of Connections First Project Advisory Committee, Calgary, AB

2017 - Member of Research Initiatives Group (research partnership hub between AHS CAAMHPPs programming and U of C researchers specializing in mental health/psychiatry), Calgary, AB

Education

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO                                                                              

Toronto, Ontario

Doctor of Philosophy, Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work                          

June 2011

Dissertation:  Doing the Right Thing: Negotiating Risk and Safety in Child Protection Work with Domestic Violence Cases

Advisor:  Dr. Faye Mishna

 

 

 

WILFRID LAURIER UNIVERSITY

Waterloo, Ontario

Master of Social Work

April 1998

 

 

UNIVERSITY OF GUELPH

Guelph, Ontario

Bachelor of Arts, Honours Psychology Co-op Program with Family and Social Relations Minor   

February, 1995

 

 

Additional Clinical Training and Education:

 

INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCEMENT IN SELF PSYCHOLOGY                             

Toronto, Ontario

Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy Training Program                       

September 2000-June 2004

 

Media Work

Publications from 2015-Present

Thomas-Skaf, B. A., & Jenney, A. (2020). Bringing social justice into focus: 'Trauma-informed' work with children with disabilities. Child Care in Practice. https://doi.org/10.1080/13575279.2020.1765146

Lateef, R., & Jenney, A. (2020). Understanding sexually victimized male adolescents with sexually abusive behaviours: A narrative review and clinical implications. Trauma, Violence, & Abuse. https://doi.org/10.1177/1524838020906558

Frampton, N. M. A., Jenney, A., & Shaw, J. (2020). Implementation of practice-based research in social work education. Papers on Postsecondary Learning and Teaching, 4, 96-100.

Jenney, A. (2020). When relationships are the trigger: The paradox of safety and connection in child and youth care. Residential Treatment for Children & Youth, 37(2), 94-107. https://doi.org/10.1080/0886571X.2019.1704671

Jenney, A., & Kulkarni, C. (2020). More than just ghosts in the nursery: Understanding how the presence of violence and trauma in the lives of infants and young children impact on parenting and child development. In R. Alaggia & C. Vine (Eds.), Cruel but not unusual: Violence in Canadian families (3rd ed.). Wilfrid Laurier University Press.

Baird, S. L., Alaggia, R., & Jenney, A. (2019). “Like opening up old wounds”: Conceptualizing intersectional trauma among survivors of intimate partner violence. Journal of Interpersonal Violence. https://doi.org/10.1177/0886260519848788

Jenney, A. (2019). Keeping the child in mind when thinking about violence in families. In W. Bunston & S. Jones (Eds.), Supporting vulnerable babies and young children: Interventions for working with trauma, mental health, illness and other complex challenges. Jessica Kingsley Publishers.

Jenney, A., & Alaggia, R. (2018). The impact of exposure to IPV on children and youth: Considering strategies for cultivating resilience. In W. DeKeseredy, C. M. Rennison, & A. K. Sanchez (Eds.), Routledge international handbook of violence studies.Taylor and Francis Ltd.

Jenney, A., & Exner-Cortens, D. (2018). Toxic masculinity and mental health in young women: An analysis of 13 Reasons Why. Affilia: Journal of Women and Social Work, 33(3), 410-417. https://doi.org/10.1177/0886109918762492

Lieggio, M., Delay, D. C. J., & Jenney, A. (2018). Challenging social work epistemology in children’s mental health: The connections between evidence-based practice and young people’s psychiatrization. British Journal of Social Work, 49(5), 1180-1197. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcy104

Wall, M. A., Jenney, A., & Walsh, M. (2018). Conducting evaluation research with children exposed to violence: How technological innovations in methodologies and data collection may enhance the process. International Journal of Child Abuse & Neglect, 85, 202-208. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2018.01.007

Alaggia R., Maiter, S., & Jenney, A. (2017). In whose words? Struggles and strategies of service providers working with immigrant clients with limited language abilities in the violence against women sector and child protection services. Child & Family Social Work, 22(1), 472-481. https://doi.org/10.1111/cfs.12266

Jenney, A., Alaggia, R., & Niepage, M. (2016). “The lie is that it’s not going to get better”: Narratives of resilience from childhood exposure to intimate partner violence. International Journal of Child and Adolescent Resilience, 4(1), 64-76.

Alaggia, R., Gadalla, T. M., Shlonsky, A., Jenney, A., & Daciuk, J. (2015). Does differential response make a difference: Examining domestic violence cases in child protection services. Child & Family Social Work, 20(1), 83-95. https://doi.org/10.1111/cfs.12058

 

 

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