Research Interests
Drew Rothenberg joined the Center for Child and Family Policy as a postdoctoral associate in September 2018 and now works as a Research Scientist at the Center. His research is focused on the development of adaptive and maladaptive parenting practices and family processes across ontogeny, culture and generations. Utilizing a developmental psychopathology framework, he examines how parenting practices, family dynamics, and evidence-based mental health interventions affect normal and abnormal child development. His program of research has three aims. First, he explores how maladaptive family processes can be passed from one generation to the next. Second, he identifies strategies to prevent the intergenerational transmission of these processes in different culture contexts. Third, he implements these preventative interventions in medically underserved communities that need them the most.
Selected Grants
Intervention Impacts on Child Wellbeing and Parenting across Generations
ResearchResearch Scientist · Awarded by Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development · 2017 - 2029Childhood, Adolescence, and Covid-Related Risk and Protective Factors in the Development of Adjustment in Early Adulthood Across Cultures
ResearchPostdoctoral Associate · Awarded by Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development · 2022 - 2027Diseases of Despair in Young Adulthood: Risk, Resilience, and Prevention
ResearchResearch Scientist · Awarded by University of Vermont · 2019 - 2024Fellowships, Gifts, and Supported Research
Providing a Continuum of Parent-Child Interaction Therapy Services to At-Risk Families and Children with Identified Developmental Disabilities ·
2018
- 2023
Co-Investigator ·
Awarded by: The Children's Trust of Miami
· $3,099,097.00
National Research Service Award (Institution Sponsored) ·
2015
- 2017
Predoctoral Fellow ·
Awarded by: Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
· $46,000.00