Espín was recipient of the American Psychological Association (APA) Award for Distinguished Professional Contributions to Public Service in 1991.[5] Her award citation emphasized that she "worked forcefully to advance cross-cultural communication, gender issues, human sexuality, international awareness, and cultural factors as critical elements in the knowledge base of psychology. Her contributions have been especially valuable to understanding and providing psychological services for Latina women, immigrants, and lesbians."[6]
Espín was born December 12, 1938, in Santiago de Cuba.[1] In 1961, she left Cuba and began her life as an immigrant to Spain, Panama, Costa Rica, and eventually the United States.[12] Espín completed a BA at the Universidad De Costa Rica in 1969 and a PhD at the University of Florida in 1974. Early in her career she conducted a brief survey (in collaboration with Richard R. Renner) and created an annotated bibliography to inform counselors about the situation in Latin America.[13] She completed post-doctoral training through a National Institutes of Mental Health fellowship at Harvard University (1981-1983).[2]
Espín worked as an Interim professor in the Department of Counselor Education at McGill University (1974-1975) before moving to Boston University where she was a Clinical Professor in the Counseling Psychology Program (1975-1986). After four years as the Director of the Counseling Psychology Program at Tufts University (1986-1990), Espín moved to the Department of Women's Studies, San Diego State University, where she remained until her retirement in 2007[14] while also working part-time as Professor at the California School of Professional Psychology.[4] In San Diego, Espin was part of a writers' group that included Lillian Faderman, Carolyn Marsden, and Abigail Padgett who encouraged her to write about memory and language.[15] Other important colleagues who influenced her writing were Ellyn Kaschak and Natalie Porter.[15]
Books
Cole, E., Rothblum, E. D., & Espín, O. M. (Eds.) (1992). Refugee women and their mental health: Shattered societies, shattered lives. Haworth Press.
Espín, O. M. (Ed.) (1997). Latina realities: Essays on healing, migration, and sexuality . Westview Press.
Espín, O. M. (1999). Women crossing boundaries: A psychology of immigration and transformations of sexuality. Routledge.
Espín, O.M. (2020). My native land is memory: Stories of a Cuban childhood. San Diego: San Diego State University Press.
Espín, O. M. (2020). Women, sainthood, and power: A feminist psychology of cultural constructions. Lexington Books.
Espín, O. M. & Dottolo, A. L. (2015). Gendered journeys: Women, migration and feminist psychology . Palgrave MacMillan.
Kawahara, D. M., & Espín, O. M. (Eds.). (2007). Feminist reflections on growth and transformation: Asian American women in therapy . Haworth Press.
Kawahara, D. M., & Espín, O. M. (Eds.). (2013). Feminist therapy with Latina women: Personal and social voices . Routledge.