Mary Clare Lennon, PhD

  • Professor of Clinical Sociomedical Sciences
Profile Headshot

Profile Navigation

Overview

Dr. Mary Clare Lennon's recent research examines how the economic circumstances of families affect children's health, academic achievement, psychological well-being, and later life chances. Her work examines changes in family income over the course of children's lives and classifies families according to patterns of change. This research has found that poverty throughout childhood is especially detrimental for children while poverty experienced later is less so. Dr. Lennon is also interested in how social policies may affect low-income families and children. Until recently, she worked with the Research Forum at the National Center for Children in Poverty to understand the effects of welfare reform on women and their children. This work concerns efforts to understand how welfare reform was implemented at the state level from the perspective of welfare administrators, workers, and recipients. It also focuses on women who experience personal problems, including depression, substance abuse, and domestic violence, that may limit their ability to comply with the work-first requirements of the welfare system. Dr. Lennon has edited books in each of these areas, as well as written academic and policy reports. A third area of research focuses on understanding problems of homelessness. Research currently underway aims to develop typologies of individuals based on their patterns of homelessness over time, which can help identify groups of individuals at risk for chronic homelessness and may be used to specify the effects of interventions to prevent homelessness among those at risk.

Academic Appointments

  • Professor of Clinical Sociomedical Sciences

Research

A longtime faculty member at Columbia, Mary Clare Lennon recently accepted a position at the City University of New York Graduate Center, but retains a Columbia affiliation as well as a connection to the H&SS program. Her recent research examines how the economic circumstances of families affect children's health, academic achievement, psychological well-being, and later life chances. Her work examines changes in family income over the course of children's lives and classifies families according to patterns of change. Dr. Lennon is also interested in how social policies may affect low-income families and children. Until recently, she worked with the Research Forum at the National Center for Children in Poverty to understand the effects of welfare reform on women and their children, work which includes attention to women who experience personal problems, including depression, substance abuse, and domestic violence, that may limit their ability to comply with the work-first requirements of the welfare system. A third area of research is homelessness. Research currently underway develops typologies of individuals based on their patterns of homelessness over time, which can help identify groups of individuals at risk for chronic homelessness and may be used to specify the effects of interventions to prevent homelessness among those at risk.

Research Interests

  • Biostatistical Methods
  • Child and Adolescent Health
  • Chronic disease
  • Community Health
  • Global Health
  • Mental Health

Selected Publications

Lennon, MC, Corbett T (eds) Policy Into Action: Implementation and Welfare Reform Urban Institute Press Washington DC 2003

Lennon, MC (ed) Women & Health: Work, Welfare and Well-Being Haworth Press Binghamton NY 2001

Lennon, MC, Blome J, English K Depression Among Women on Welfare: A Review of the Literature. Journal of the American Medical Women�s Association 57 27-31 2002

Keyes, Corey Handbook of Women and Depression Cambridge University press forthcoming

Lennon, MC, Appelbaum, L, and Aber, JL Circumstances dictate public views of government assistance National Center for Children in Poverty National Center for Children in Poverty 2003

Wagmiller, R., Lennon, M.C., Kuang, L., Alberti, P. and Aber, J.L The dynamics of economic disadvantage and children�s life chances American Journal of Sociology forthcoming