Noted psychologist Beth Shinn resigns from American Psychological Association

October 7th, 2007

The damage to the American Psychological Association from its indefensible position supporting psychologists participating in interrogations where human rights are ignored, and its weak stand, full of loopholes, against bush’s torture regime. Right after the APA Convention in August, noted psychologist and author Mary Pipher returned an award to the APA in protest of these policies. Today, Beth Shinn, former President of two APA divisions, resigned from the APA “because the American Psychological Association continues to condone psychologists’ work in detention centers that violate international law and because of actions by APA’s leadership to discourage dissent from its policies in this matter.”

Here is her letter [also available in pdf]:

October 7, 2007

Dr. Sharon Brehm
President, American Psychological Association
Department of Psychology
1101 East 10th Street
Bloomington, IN 47405-7007

Dear Sharon and Members of the Board of Directors:

I am writing with sorrow to resign from the American Psychological Association. I do not do so lightly, because my connections to APA are deep and long. I have been a member since 1980, a fellow since 1986, and a president of two APA divisions and their associated societies, 9 (the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues) and 27 (the Society for Community Research and Action). I feel I owe you and my other colleagues an explanation, detailed below. Briefly, I am resigning because the American Psychological Association continues to condone psychologists’ work in detention centers that violate international law and because of actions by APA’s leadership to discourage dissent from its policies in this matter.

Condoning Work in Illegal Detention Centers

This summer, the APA Council voted down an amendment stating that the role of psychologists in settings in which detainees are deprived of their human rights should be limited to providing psychological treatment. APA’s action effectively condones psychologists’ continued participation in interrogations at Guantánamo and in other centers that violate both the Geneva Convention and the U.S. Constitution. The resolution that was approved simply requires that psychologists not plan, design, or assist in the use of torture and other forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, and that they report instances of which they become aware.

I believe that the failure of APA to call for psychologists to leave Guantánamo and CIA black sites lends support and legitimacy to violations of ethics and international law. The American Bar Association has announced that it will stop attempting to find lawyers for detainees at Guantánamo because, according to a report in the New York Times, “it did not want to ‘lend support and credibility’ to what it called inadequate legal protections for the 340 men held there” (Glaberson, 2007). APA should show similar courage.

In addition, although I appreciate the argument that psychologists “on the inside” are in a position to challenge conditions of prisoners’ confinement, and have done so, I think it is equally likely that they will be co-opted. There is strong social psychological evidence of the coercive power of situational influences, even in the course of quite short-term experiments, and evidence that individuals recruit information and shift attitudes to justify the behavior in which they have engaged. Psychologists are unlikely to be immune to such forces, especially when secrecy requirements prevent them from discussing issues with others who are not subject to the same influences. Under the long-term and open-ended coercive conditions of detention centers, it seems at least as likely that psychologists would become part of the problem as that they would succeed in creating solutions. Indeed, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), as cited in the New York Times and denied by the government, has stated that information from detainees’ medical records has been used to guide interrogations, and that psychologists are centrally involved in this process:

Doctors and medical personnel conveyed information about prisoners’ mental health and vulnerabilities to interrogators, the report said, sometimes directly, but usually through a group called the Behavioral Science Consultation Team, or B.S.C.T. The team, known informally as Biscuit, is composed of psychologists and psychological workers who advise the interrogators, the report said. (Lewis, 2004).

Although APA has passed resolutions unequivocally condemning and prohibiting psychologists’ participation in torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, a report of the Office of the Inspector General of the Department of Defense (dated August 25, 2006, but released more recently) suggests that psychologists have been centrally involved in practices that the APA has banned. In a section on “development of interrogation policy at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,” the report suggests that psychologists were responsible for reverse engineering torture techniques from the military’s Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE) program originally intended to train U.S. personnel how to resist breaking down if they were captured and tortured. Especially chilling to me, the report states that “The Army Special Operations Command was examining the role of interrogation support as a ‘SERE Psychologist competency area’” (p. 25)

The APA’s ban on psychologists’ participation in torture is absolute, but the Association explicitly amended its Ethics Code in 2002 to permit psychologists who experience other conflicts between law and ethics to “adhere to the requirements of the law, regulations, or other governing legal authority” (section 1.02). They should first make the conflict known and attempt to resolve it. I believe that “the governing legal authority” at both Guantánamo and CIA black sites, where individuals are held without prospect of release, under shifting legal guidelines, and without the opportunity to challenge their detention in impartial courts, violates international law. By continuing to work in such facilities, psychologists, whatever their intentions, become complicit in their violations of human rights. Given the ICRC evidence that psychologists have misused medical records at Guantánamo to exploit detainees’ vulnerabilities in interrogation, I would not advocate an exception for therapeutic treatment.

Note that I make no representation about the guilt or innocence of the detainees. Some may well be guilty of heinous crimes against humanity. Others are probably innocents swept up in error. But all are human beings entitled to the protection of international law.

Discouraging Dissent

Reasonable people can disagree about appropriate ethical responses to conditions that are widely deemed unethical. I appreciate the debate that went on at the Convention this summer. However, in many other ways, APA’s leaders have blocked challenges to psychologists’ involvement in detention centers, misrepresented the nature of dissent, and even made ad hominem attacks on dissenters.

An early action that minimized challenges was the composition of the APA Presidential Task Force on Psychological Ethics and National Security (PENS). Three of the ten members were active duty military officers, two more worked for Defense Department Agencies, and a sixth consulted with a Defense agency. As noted in a September 19 letter to you by Drs. Steven Reisner, Stephen Soldz, and Brad Olson (Reisner, Soldz & Olson, 2007), as well as an earlier open letter which I co-signed, some of these members were in the chain of command at the places and during the times that abuses have been documented. Some are also credited with protesting unethical actions. Irrespective of their individual actions, their employment constituted a conflict of interest. A committee’s criticism of detention centers and psychologists’ involvement in them is likely to be muted when a majority of its members are paid salaries or consulting fees by the military or the Department of Defense. Two of the four members with no Defense involvement have now dissociated themselves from the PENS Task Force. Dr. Wessells resigned in January, 2006, “because continuing work with the Task Force tacitly legitimates the wider silence and inaction of the APA on the crucial issues at hand” (Wessells, 2006) and Dr. Arrigo publicly complained about irregularities in Task Force procedures in her remarks at the most recent APA convention, as recorded by Democracy Now (Arrigo, 2007).

Another recent action to minimize challenge occurred this summer at the APA convention, when the Board of Directors initially attempted to prevent APA Council from voting on a resolution limiting psychologists’ roles in detention centers (“the moratorium resolution”) by presenting its own substitute resolution, which reaffirmed, but also unfortunately weakened last year’s resolution condemning torture. Under APA procedures, Council would have had the opportunity to vote on a moratorium resolution only if they first voted down the substitute resolution condemning torture. When advocates pointed out that this substitution violated APA procedures (2006, p. 19: substitute motions cannot “change an affirmative main motion into a negative proposal not to take that action”) there was discussion and compromise: A stronger substitute resolution was put forward and passed, and a limit on psychologists’ involvement was allowed as an amendment, and voted down. Dr. Linda Woolf (2007) has written articulately and at length about the limitations of the resolution that was passed: “Ultimately,” she summarizes, “the 2007 Resolution maintains the status quo and prisoners will continue to experience torture and other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment both as a function of perpetrator behavior and as a function of context” (Woolf, 2007).

An example of the misrepresentation of dissent is the letter you have circulated from Dr. Olivia Moorehead-Slaughter, chair of the PENS Task Force (Moorehead-Slaughter, 2007), commenting on Dr. Arrigo’s concerns about the Task Force. Dr. Moorehead-Slaughter spends a considerable portion of her letter defending against attacks that Dr. Arrigo never made. Someone who read only Dr. Moorehead-Slaughter’s reply but not Dr. Arrigo’s original criticism of procedural irregularities and conflicts of interest, might think the criticism was misguided. For example, Dr. Moorehead-Slaughter begins with a disclaimer that she has “never worked in any capacity for the CIA, the FBI, or the Department of Defense,” a claim that Dr. Arrigo never made, and an extensive defense of her integrity, which Dr. Arrigo never impugned. She goes on to defend the actions and integrity of other members of the Task Force, when Dr. Arrigo’s concern was with procedures and conflicts of interest created by members’ employment. Dr. Moorehead-Slaughter does go on to address some of Dr. Arrigo’s procedural concerns, although in ways that have been disputed by Reisner et al. (2007). She ends by lauding APA’s openness as represented in this summer’s mini-convention on ethics and interrogation, which I agree was laudable, and by the fact that “The Board of Directors was entirely committed to ensuring that a proposal limiting the roles of APA members in detention facilities would be discussed and debated at the Council of Representatives meeting.” As noted above, I do not believe this is true.

More egregious is former president Gerald Koocher’s denigration of critics. In his presidential column in the APA’s Monitor on Psychology, he complained that:

A number of opportunistic commentators masquerading as scholars have continued to report on alleged abuses by mental health professionals. However, when solicited in person to provide APA with names and circumstances in support of such claims, no data have been forthcoming from these same critics and no APA members have been linked to unprofessional behaviors (Koocher, 2006, p. 7, emphasis added).

The American Psychological Associations Public Affairs Office (2007), on the other hand, acknowledges that two psychologists have been identified as developers of interrogation tactics, but they are not APA members.

Dr. Koocher has also defamed both Dr. Arrigo and her father in a widely-circulated, open letter to Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! (Koocher, 2007). His allegations were refuted (Reisner, et al., 2007) and since removed from his web site and Goodman’s. But even if they had been true, his effort to discredit the messenger, rather than dealing with the substance of the message, has no place in reasoned argument. The substance of Dr. Arrigo’s message was that APA-Department of Defense conflicts of interest on the part of six task force members and several unacknowledged participants in the task force meeting compromised the PENS report.

In sum, I have become increasingly troubled with the American Psychological Associations failure to call for a moratorium on psychologists’ involvement at Guantánamo and CIA black sites, and am appalled by the actions of its leadership in response to dissent. I hereby resign.

Marybeth Shinn
Member # 1603-1653

Cc: Members of the Board of Directors, Dr. Moorehead-Slaughter

References

American Psychological Association (2006). 2006 Council of Representatives Handbook. http://www.apa.org/governance/rephandbook06.pdf

American Psychological Association (2007) Reaffirmation of the American Psychological Association Position Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment and Its Application to Individuals Defined in the United States Code as “Enemy Combatants” Resolution Adopted August 19, 2007. http://www.apa.org/governance/resolutions/councilres0807.html

American Psychological Association Public Affairs Office (September, 2007).Frequently asked questions regarding apa’s policies and positions on the use of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment during interrogations. http://www.apa.org/releases/faqinterrogation.html

Arrigo, J.M. (2007, August 20) Remarks at the Convention of the American Psychological Association, as recorded by Democracy Now. Transcript at http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/08/20/1628234.

Glaberson, W. (2007, September 29). Legal aid offer for detainees is retracted. The New York Times, p. A9. Available here.

Koocher, G. (2006, Feb 2.). Speaking against torture. President’s Column, Monitor on Psychology, 37 (2), p. 5. Available here.

Koocher, G. (2007). Open letter to Amy Goodman. http://psychoanalystsopposewar.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/koocher_open_letter_to_amy_goodman.pdf

Lewis, N. A. (2004, November 30). Red Cross Finds Detainee Abuse in Guantánamo. The New York Times, p. A1. Available here.

Moorehead-Slaughter, O. (2007, undated in the version I received). Letter to Sharon Brehm. Posted on multiple listservs and posted here

Office of the Inspector General of the Department of Defense (August 25, 2006). Review of the DOD-Directed Investigations of Detainee Abuse. Report No. 06-Intell-10, August 25, 2006, Evaluation Report. Available here.

Reisner, S., Soldz, S., & Olson, B. (2007, September 19). Letter to Sharon Brehm. Posted on multiple listservs and posted here

Wessells, M. (2006, January 15). Resignation letter. Posted on listserv of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues as well as here.

Woolf, L. M. (2007, September 1/2). Sad day for psychologists: Major blow against human rights. Counterpunch. http://www.counterpunch.org/woolf09012007.html

Meanwhile, the list of APA members protesting by withholding their dues grows daily. How many more members will have to join them, Beth Shinn, and Mary Pipher before the APA changes course and decisively breaks with the Bush administration and its torture regime? Or will the organization go the way of the dinosaurs, to be replaced by an organization willing to put ethics above access to the military/intelligence establishment?

Entry Filed under: Democracy, Free Speech, Guantanamo, Interrogation, Law, Psychological Torture, SERE, Torture

18 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Valtin  |  October 7th, 2007 at 8:18 pm

    Bravo, Dr. Shinn! There is no honor left in APA, only lies, manipulations, and calumny. The failure to sanction Koocher for his libelous imprecations against Dr. Arrigo should have been the last straw, if the capitualtion on torture, wrapped in legalistic language redolent of the best (or worst) of the Bushite legal minds, weren’t enough.

  • 2. blizzard  |  October 8th, 2007 at 7:29 pm

    Good for you, Dr Shinn (and not before time). I’m surprised that Linda Woolf hasn’t done the same thing yet.
    As for ex-president Gerry Koocher - a war crimes tribunal is the most fitting end to his disgraceful career.

  • 3. Will to Truth » Blo&hellip  |  October 8th, 2007 at 7:29 pm

    [...] Noted psychologist Beth Shinn resigns from American Psychological Association [...]

  • 4. bk  |  October 8th, 2007 at 9:18 pm

    It takes critical mass to create real changes. I can understand the horrific pressures involved in such decision making. It can leave one to feel like a persona non grata at times…

  • 5. Valerie Rose  |  October 8th, 2007 at 9:34 pm

    Clear, cogent, and courageous!! Thank you Dr. Shinn for standing up and speaking out on both of these critical issues: The continuing involvement of APA psychologists in Guantanamo Bay and Black site interrogations, and the repressive actions of APA leadership in response to the dissent and critique that is so necessary. Really, thank you.

  • 6. b fearn  |  October 8th, 2007 at 11:22 pm

    Thank you Dr. Shinn! Where are all the other APA members who should do the same thing?
    “He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it.” Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

  • 7. Bob Jackson  |  October 8th, 2007 at 11:25 pm

    Reminds me of Leonard Berkowitz’s studies of the “effects” of television violence. He gave his volunteers electric shocks, ostensibly to study the use of punishment as a learning tool. If the victims retalated in kind, or reported their tormentors, they were classed as “aggressive”, rather than responsible citizens applying the norm of reciprocity. At the time, I thought it was a sick discipline. How did Dr Shinn survive so long?

  • 8. Kate Madison  |  October 9th, 2007 at 12:56 am

    Congratulations and best wishes, Dr. Shinn, for resigning from the APA! My unhappy view is that the world is too lacking in “Cassandras”! You have become one, and for that you have my gratitude and respect! It is so hard for me to believe that therapists of any persuasion can condone torture and inhumane treatment of our fellow humans! I hope many others follow your courageous example.

    Peace and Health-

    Kate Madison, LCSW
    Depoe Bay, Oregon

  • 9. Meanwhile in Palestine an&hellip  |  October 9th, 2007 at 11:35 am

    [...] to denials by President George Bush, House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Sunday. Noted psychologist Beth Shinn resigns from American Psychological Association : The damage to the American Psychological Association from its indefensible position supporting [...]

  • 10. Marianne Jackson  |  October 12th, 2007 at 5:24 pm

    Many thanks to Dr. Shinn for speaking out. Her letter is clear and forthright and will help move us forward to end the collusion of APA with the U.S. military and secret service.
    Brooklyn, NY

  • 11. Robert Adler  |  October 16th, 2007 at 11:06 am

    Congratulations to Dr. Shinn for an act of courage. I only hope that her stance acts as a wake-up call to many other APA members.

  • 12. Psyche, Science, and Soci&hellip  |  December 5th, 2007 at 9:41 pm

    [...] Jacobs joins Beth Shinn and many other psychologists in saying “enough is enough.”  It is to hoped that the [...]

  • 13. Psyche, Science, and Soci&hellip  |  December 7th, 2007 at 8:26 pm

    [...] stating my reasons, I can do no better than refer you to the attached copy of the October 7, 2007 letter to you from Marybeth Shinn, Professor of Applied Psychology and Public Policy at New York University, and soon to be my [...]

  • 14. More Flee APA Over Interr&hellip  |  December 8th, 2007 at 7:03 am

    [...] stating my reasons, I can do no better than refer you to the attached copy of the October 7, 2007 letter to you from Marybeth Shinn, Professor of Applied Psychology and Public Policy at New York University, and soon to be my faculty [...]

  • 15. Psyact - More Flee APA Ov&hellip  |  January 6th, 2008 at 10:17 am

    [...] stating my reasons, I can do no better than refer you to the attached copy of the October 7, 2007 letter to you from Marybeth Shinn, Professor of Applied Psychology and Public Policy at New York University, and soon to be my faculty [...]

  • 16. Psyche, Science, and Soci&hellip  |  January 28th, 2008 at 8:28 pm

    [...] Unlike some others who have left APA, my resignation is not based solely on the stance APA has taken regarding the participation of psychologists in national security interrogations. Rather, I view APA’s shifting position on interrogations to spring from a decades-long commitment to serve uncritically the national security apparatus of the United States. Recent publications and both public and closed professional events sponsored by APA have made it clear that this organization is dedicated to serving the national security interests of the American government and military, to the extent of ignoring basic human rights practice and law. The influence of the Pentagon and the CIA in APA activities is overt and pervasive, if often hidden. The revelations over the constitution and behavior of the 2005 Psychological Ethics and National Security (PENS) panel are a case in point. While charged with investigating the dilemmas for psychologists involved in military interrogations in the light of the scandals surrounding Guanatamo’s Camp Delta and Abu Ghraib prison, it was stacked with military and governmental personnel, and closely monitored and pressured by APA staff. [...]

  • 17. Psychologists resign from&hellip  |  February 19th, 2008 at 2:30 pm

    [...] are some related stories for more background on the issue: One Two Three [...]

  • 18. cdr  |  February 20th, 2008 at 2:32 am

    I hope you understand that your opinion is not shared by everyone in our field. I disagree with your position and do not want to be thought of as a person who does not support our troops and their leaders because I am a psychologist. The APA is doing its job for their members and trying to be apolitical.

    Manhattan Beach, CA

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