Sherri McCarthy, PhD, is active on the boards of many international psychology organizations including ICOPE, ICP, APsyA and APA Division 52. She has authored many books, including Coping with Special Needs Classmates (Rosen, 1995); Death in the Family (International Self-Counsel Press, 1993); Teaching Psychology around the World (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2007; 2009);and Preventing Teen Violence (Greenwood-Praeger, 2006). She has also written chapters in State Violence and the Right to Peace: An International Survey of the Views of Ordinary People (ABC-CLIO, 2009), Psychology of Terrorism (Greenwood-Praeger, 2002), Treating Abusers in Correctional Settings, (Haworth, 2003), Handbook of Practice-based Research (Oxford, 2004) and other essay collections. Her articles have appeared in journals including Peace Psychology, Teaching of Psychology, Korean Journal of Thinking and Problem Solving, Psychologie Pratiques, Community College Journal of Research and Practice and others. She has taught at universities around the world, as a Senior Fulbright Research and Teaching Scholar in Russia for 1 year; in Brazil as a CNPq Visiting Research Scholar for 3 years; at the University of Bologna, Italy as a lecturer in 2007; and at the University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur as a visiting professor during 2008–09. Sherri has been a faculty member at Northern Arizona University, Yuma since 1993, where she is Professor of Educational Psychology, Counselling and Human Relations.