About me
Trained as a clinical social worker, Amy S. Millin, MSW, MA, previously worked with children and youth at Jane Addams Hull House (Chicago) and Carson Valley School (Flourtown, PA). So began what has become a life journey of exploring what it means to be resilient, the role stories have in our lives, the strength of communities, and the power that results through partnerships.
Amy is the President/Executive Director of the Maryland Lynching Memorial Project, where her work is centered on the ways that community programming creates opportunity for conversation at the local level, across the state, and nationally. She also serves as a Commissioner on the Maryland Lynching Truth and Reconciliation Commission—the first and only such Commission in the country. She is a consultant for the National Council for the Traditional Arts where she provides development services and research and supports the National Endowment for the Arts' National Heritage Fellowship Honorifics as well as National and Legacy Folk Festivals.