Dr. Oberman’s research focuses on the intersection between spiritual/religious experiences and observable scientific data. Her recent areas of research include religion and violence; the psychology of spirituality; the nature of belief in the twenty-first century; and the influence of faith traditions and spirituality in health care and medicine. She teaches interdisciplinary courses in the Religious Studies Program on religion, psychology, and science, which are crosslisted with the Department of Psychology and the Department of Philosophy. She also teaches for the University of Arizona Honors College. Dr. Oberman is Vice-President of the American Academy of Religion in the Western Region AAR/WR) and a chair of the AAR/WR sections on Philosophy of Religion and Psychology, Culture and Religion. She has published “A Postmodern Perspective on Mental Health, Spirituality, and Religion: Bridging Humanities and Scientific Views of Religion in the Twenty-first Century,” the final chapter in Mental Health, Spirituality, and Religion in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Age De Gruyter, 2014) Her current book project is titled Postmodern Perspectives on Mental Health, Spirituality, and Religion.
Majors: Honor Thesis Research: Conference Paper submission and acceptance, Article for Publication, IRB survey research: Brian Lee is in the process submitting his honors thesis article for publication: Religion, Trauma in the LBGTQ+ Community and the Neurosequential Model of Therapeutics (NMT.) Jayne Reimes's thesis paper was accepted at the Medicine and Religion conference for spring 2023, "At the Limits of Medicine: Caring for Body and Soul at the end of LIfe." Ben Drogin submitted his research to th