projects |
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Resiliency in Communities After Stress and Trauma (ReCAST) Evaluation (closes September 30, 2027) |
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Promoting Protective Policies to Reduce Violence in Schools (closed) |
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Promoting Protective Policies to Reduce Violence in Schools 2 (closes September 30, 2025) |
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Faculty Profile |
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Megan Hicks, PhD is an Assistant Professor at Wayne State University. Previously, she served as a post-doctoral research fellow in the School of Social Work under Poco Kernsmith and Joanne Smith-Darden.
Her primary research interests include risk and protective factors influencing health risk behaviors and juvenile justice outcomes among Black youth. In particular, her work investigates adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), community risk factors, and relational protective factors that impact healthy youth development. Additionally, Hicks has expertise in program evaluation, prevention science, and community education. Currently, Hicks is leading an evaluation of the Wayne County juvenile justice system. Additionally, she is leading a project that examines the social determinants of health among Black families in Detroit. Lastly, Hicks specializes in complex quantitative research methods and research design.
Hicks has interest in teaching courses in family violence, intervention and prevention in Black communities, human development and the life course, and adolescent development.
Expert in Health disparities among Black Communities, and risk-taking among youth and young adults
Hicks, M.R. & Kogan, S.M. (2019). Risk and protective process affecting rural Black men’s sexual risk behavior. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 1-13.
Hicks, M.R & Kogan, S.M. (2018). The Influence of Racial Discrimination on Smoking among Young Black Men: A prospective analysis. Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Use, 1-16.
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