Elizabeth Lightfoot is Director and Distinguished Professor of Social Policy at the Arizona State University School of Social Work, the largest school of social work in a research university in the United States. Lightfoot’s research centers on disability policy and services, with a focus on the intersections of disability with child welfare, aging, disparities, and abuse. She has conducted numerous projects investigating the interactions of parents and children with disabilities in the child welfare system and her research findings have been used as evidence the creation of national policies involving disability.
Before coming to ASU, she was the Global Distinguished Professor at the University of Minnesota School of Social Work for 23 years. At Minnesota she directed the PhD Program for 15 years, developed new MSW tracks in community practice, international social work, and health, disability and aging, and established an MSW field placement in Namibia. She also has been a Fulbright Scholar for sabbatical years in both Namibia and Romania.
She is a member of the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare, has received the Group for the Advancement of Doctoral Education’s Educational Leadership award, and has received university and college wide awards for international engagement, educational leadership, and teaching. She has served as the President of the Group for the Advancement of Doctoral Education in Social Work and has been on the board of both the Society for Social Work and Research, the Council of Social Work Education, and the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare.
She enjoys teaching doctoral classes in research methods and social policy and MSW courses in disability, policy and macro practice, she has advised 25 PhD students, and she has mentored students and faculty around the world. She consults often with PhD programs in the United States and around the world on establishing and improving social work doctoral education.