Dr. Stacy Gallin

Dr. Stacy Gallin is the Director of the Center to Combat Antisemitism and Reinforce Multicultural Acceptance (CARMA). She is also the Founding Director of the Benjamin Ferencz Institute for Ethics, Human Rights and the Holocaust (formerly the Maimonides Institute for Medicine, Ethics and the Holocaust) and a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University. In July 2023, Dr. Gallin founded Athletes Against Antisemitism and Discrimination to engage athletes—both at the student level and beyond—and empower them to use their platform to help raise awareness regarding the Holocaust, antisemitism and other forms of identity-based hate. She is a contributor for the Globe Post and the Times of Israel, where she writes about issues related to ethics, law, public policy and human rights through the lens of the Holocaust. Dr. Gallin co-edited the book, Bioethics and the Holocaust: A Comprehensive Study in How the Holocaust Continues to Shape the Ethics of Health, Medicine and Human Rights, published in summer 2022 and available open access as part of the "Project on Bioethics and the Holocaust," a partnership between the Ferencz Institute and the USC Shoah Foundation. Dr. Gallin also teaches international courses on ethics, human rights and the Holocaust as the Co-Chair of Education for the Global Network for Medical, Health Professions and Bioethics Education. She received her doctorate in Medical Humanities (DMH) from Drew University in 2012.