"Research should involve communities as partners, not subjects."- Tiffany N. Younger, PhD

Positions and Education

Postdoctoral Associate, Yale School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry

PhD, Social Welfare, CUNY Graduate Center

MSc, Clinical Epidemiology & Health Services, Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences

MSSP, Social Policy, University of Pennsylvania School of Social Policy and Practice

BA, English Literature, Hunter College
2004 – 2009

Dr. Tiffany N. Younger is a social medical scientist and Postdoctoral Fellow at the Yale School of Medicine in the Department of Psychiatry. She was born and raised in the Bronx. Her research explores intersections of race, gender, the economy, and health, utilizing both quantitative and qualitative methods within a critical community participatory action research framework. Known for her expertise in trauma-informed research, Dr. Younger emphasizes the importance of lived experience in research and prioritizes healing as a key outcome in collaborations with participants and co-researchers. She has conducted extensive research across the United States and internationally in South Africa, Brazil, and Ghana.

Dr. Younger recently completed her predoctoral fellowship at The Maven Collaborative where she served as a Liberation Health Fellow and led the qualitative research. Prior to pursuing her doctoral program, Dr. Younger served as a policy fellow for United States Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, focusing on issues of criminal justice, gender, and race equity. Additionally, Dr. Younger directed policy and advocacy efforts as the Director of Policy and Advocacy at Closing the Women's Wealth Gap, where she developed strategic agendas and launched the Community Leaders Fellowship to elevate the voices of Black and Latina women facing economic inequality.

Dr. Younger is currently the founder and Lead Scientist of "Liberation for Us," a project dedicated to addressing the data gap between race, gender, the economy, and health. Through this project, she collaborates with community-based organizations to understand, evaluate, and examine the relationship between the economy and health at the intersection of race and gender.

Dr. Younger has extensive teaching experience, including senior lecturer positions at Columbia School of Social Work, where she teaches courses on Human Behavior and the Environment and Social Welfare Policy. She also instructs the Practice Lab at Hunter College Silberman School of Social Work and Social Policy and Law at the School of Social Policy and Practice at the University of Pennsylvania.

Dr. Younger earned her Doctor of Philosophy in Social Welfare from the Graduate Center at CUNY and completed her Clinical Epidemiology degree at Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences. During her predoctoral training, she conducted research as part of a T32 clinical research science fellowship with the National Institutes of Health (NIH), focusing on health disparities and the impact of structural racism on cardiovascular disease, maternal health, and cancer disparities. She also holds a Master of Science in Social Policy from the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Social Policy and Practice.

Dr. Younger resides in Harlem, New York, with her daughter Grace.