Sarah E. Ullman, PhD, is professor of criminology, law and justice at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She received her doctorate in social/developmental psychology from Brandeis University and completed a postdoctoral fellowship in health psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles. Dr. Ullman's research interests focus on violence against women, in particular the sexual victimization of women in adulthood, including the impact of rape on women's mental and physical health, which can include posttraumatic stress disorder, suicidal behavior, problem drinking, and mental health services-seeking. She has studied women's resistance strategies and self-defense training in rape situations and the role of alcohol in sexual assault incidents. Dr. Ullman has completed multiple longitudinal studies funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism of survivors of sexual assault that examined how social reactions from formal and informal support sources affect women's coping and recovery from sexual assault, including their posttraumatic stress disorder and substance abuse outcomes.
She has also interviewed both survivors and service providers (advocates and clinicians) about their disclosure and help-seeking experiences. More recently, she has collaborated in the development of an informal support network intervention for survivors and their social network members. She is currently conducting a large multi-method dyadic study to better understand disclosure and social reactions and their impacts on survivors and their informal supports and their relationship functioning.