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Professor Dwyer is a historian whose research focuses on the history of social control in the United States and the study of medical problems to which a social stigma has been attached, mental illness and epilepsy, in particular. Her research and teaching interests also encompass the history of law in the United States, and the nature and causes of deviant behavior and the changing institutional responses to it over time. Professor Dwyer's research has been funded by a number of public and private agencies, including the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Epilepsy Foundation of America. She is the author of Homes for the Mad (Rutgers University Press, 1987) and a number of articles and is currently writing a book based on her research on epilepsy, to be entitled The Burden of Illness: Epilepsy in the U.S., 18901950. Research and Teaching Areas:History of criminal justice in the U.S.; law and psychiatry/medicine; social history of American law; gender; history of institutions of social control, especially prisons and psychiatric hospitals; stigmatized illnesses (e.g., schizophrenia, epilepsy). For website related to work in the history of medicine, see: http://www.indiana.edu/~medhist/dwyer.htm
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