Mary Ellsberg


Mary Carroll Ellsberg is an American epidemiologist doing research on global health and violence against women. She is the director of the Global Women's Institute at George Washington University in Washington D.C.. Ellsberg is the daughter of Carol Cummings and the American military analyst and whistleblower, Daniel Ellsberg, and sister to Robert Ellsberg, the editor-in-chief and publisher of Orbis Books, and author Michael Ellsberg.

Education

Ellsberg received her bachelor's degree in Latin American studies from Yale University. In 2000, she obtained her Ph.D. in epidemiology and public health from Umeå University in Sweden, where she wrote a thesis on domestic violence against women in Nicaragua.

Nicaragua

In 1979 Ellsberg moved to Nicaragua to work for peace and social justice, and she lived there for almost 20 years. During this time she participated in the Nicaraguan Literacy Campaign and worked with vaccination and health consultation programs on the Caribbean coast for the Nicaragua Department of Health. Subsequently, in 1995 she did a prevalence study on domestic violence in Nicaragua, finding that 50% of women had been beaten or raped by her partner. This study was used to pass the country's first domestic violence law in 1996. In 2000, she defended her Ph.D. thesis at Umeå University on domestic violence in Nicaragua. After moving back to the United States, she has continued to conduct domestic violence research in Nicaragua.

United States

After returning to the United States, Ellsberg served as the vice president for research and programs at the International Center for Research on Women in Washington D.C.. In 2012 she joined the faculty of George Washington University where she is the director of the Global Womens Institute.

Scientific research

Ellsberg has studied domestic violence against women around the world, including Nicaragua, Melanesia, and South Sudan. She was a member of the core research team of the World Health Organization's Multi-Country Study on Domestic Violence and Women's Heath, which has compared ten different countries in terms of prevalence, risk factors and consequences of intimate partner violence.

Selected publications