Faculty Profiles


faculty photo jamie aten hdi

Jamie D. Aten, Ph.D.

Blanchard Chair of Humanitarian Disaster Leadership,
Executive Director of Humanitarian Disaster Institute,
Professor of Humanitarian Disaster Leadership

On Faculty since 2010
630.752.5609
SSB 202C


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Jamie D. Aten, Ph.D., is a disaster psychologist and disaster ministry expert. He helps others navigate mass, humanitarian, and personal disasters with scientific and spiritual insights. He is the Founder and Executive Director of the Humanitarian Disaster Institute and Disaster Ministry Conference and holds the Blanchard Chair of Humanitarian & Disaster Leadership at Wheaton College. Learn more about HDI’s new M.A. in Humanitarian and Disaster Leadership at www.wheaton.edu/HDL

In 2016, he received the FEMA Community Preparedness Champion Award at the White House. He doesn’t just study disasters—he has survived disasters. Jamie got his start helping others amidst disasters after moving to South Mississippi just six days before Hurricane Katrina struck his community. Eight years later, he was diagnosed with late-stage cancer. Now in remission, Jamie shares his disaster research and cancer story with scientific and spiritual insights, helping others cultivate faith and resilience.

His research has been supported by over $6 million in grant funding. In addition to over 100 scholarly publications, he is the co-editor and co-author of 7 academic books, including two American Psychological Association bestsellers. His disaster and humanitarian resources have been adopted and utilized by World Relief, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Department of Homeland Security, Chicago Department of Public Health, and many other organizations. Jamie is a disaster columnist for Christianity Today’s (CT) Church Law & Tax. His writing frequently appears in outlets that include The Washington Post, Christianity Today, and Psychology Today. Jamie is also regularly cited or interviewed by news outlets like CBS News, Fox News TV, Yahoo! News, Moody Radio, and Religion News Service.

Indiana State University
Ph.D., Counseling Psychology, 2005

Chicago Area Christian Training Consortium
Pre-Doctoral Internship, Clinical Psychology, 2005

Indiana State University
M.Sc., Counseling Psychology, 2001

Indiana State University
B.Sc., Psychology, 1999

  • Faith-Based Organizations
  • Psychology of Religion
  • Humanitarian Disasters
  • Disasters and Mental Health
  • Trauma
  • Disaster Research
  • Religion and Disasters
  • Children and Disasters
  • Children and Trauma
  • Faith and Mental Health
  • Natural Disasters
  • Psychology
  • Relief and Development
  • Emergency Management
  • Disaster Preparedness
  • American Psychological Association: Member
  • APA Division 36 (Psychology of Religion): Member
  • Christian Association of Psychological Studies: Member

Where’s God Amidst Disaster
Fox TV News

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Surviving Personal Disasters
CBS Chicago

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Dealing with Disaster
Moody Radio

Keynote Speaker
Fred Hutch Cancer Center Moving Beyond Cancer, Seattle, WA

Speaker
Wheaton College Chapel, Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL

Speaker
GC2 Summit on Caring for Refugees, Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL

Intensive Speaker
Justice Conference, Willow Creek Community Church, South Barrington, IL

Keynote Speaker
Disaster Ministry Conference, Community Christian Church - Naperville Yellow Box Naperville, Illinois

  • HDI 504 Foundations of Humanitarian Assistance
  • HDI 652/654 Disaster, Crisis, & Trauma Intervention

He is the Founder and Executive Director of the Humanitarian Disaster Institute, the country’s first faith-based academic disaster research center. He also leads HDI’s Religion/Spirituality and Psychology in Disasters Lab (RAPID Lab).

Most of his research focuses on how people make meaning, relate to God, and grow (spiritually and emotionally) after disasters. He also studies the role of positive psychology in church life amid disasters. More recently, he has begun studying virtues like humility and fortitude in disaster and humanitarian contexts.

His psychology of religion/spirituality and disaster research has been supported by over $6 million in grant funding.

Disaster and humanitarian resources informed by his research have been adopted and utilized by World Relief, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Department of Homeland Security, Chicago Department of Public Health, and many other organizations around the globe.

Dr. Aten founded the Disaster Ministry Conference (DMC) in 2013. The DMC is a national conference that is quickly turning into a global event.

In addition to speaking at the DMC each year, he is a sought after keynote, plenary, and workshop speaker.

He regularly speaks at conferences, churches, and college campuses across the United States and internationally, such as: The GC2 Summit, University of Cambridge, Georgia State University’s Center for the Study of Stress, Trauma, and Resilience, and Accord Network Disaster Summit.

Examples of some upcoming places where you can find Jamie speaking include: Christian Association for Psychological Studies Convention, Fred Hutch Research Cancer Center, and Evangelical Press Association Convention.

You can watch a brief talk of Jamie sharing lessons on cultivating faith and resilience amidst personal disasters.

The meaning as a buffer hypothesis: Spiritual meaning attenuates the effect of disaster exposure on posttraumatic stress, Psychology of Religion and Spirituality
Haynes, W.C., Van Tongeren, D.R., Aten, J., Davis, E. B., Davis, D. E., Hook, J. N., Boan, D., & Johnson, T., 2016

Spiritually oriented disaster psychology, Spirituality in Clinical Practice
Aten, J., O'Grady, K., Milstein, G., Boan, D. & Schruba, A., 2014

Predictors of God concept and God control after Hurricane Katrina, Psychology of Religion and Spirituality
Aten, J., Benn, P. R., Hill, P.C., Davis, D. E., & Hook, J., 2012