Kathleen Fearn-Banks, a tenured associate professor, joined the faculty of the School of Communications, University of Washington (Seattle) in 1990 after more than 25 years in the communications profession. In addition to being a feature writer at the Los Angeles Times and a news-writer, producer, and reporter for a Los Angeles network affiliated television station, she also headed, for more than 20 years, nationwide publicity campaigns for NBC Television Network series, specials, and movies. She was also vice-president of development and public relations for the Neighbors of Watts, an entertainment industry non-profit which raised funds for daycare centers in underprivileged areas of Los Angeles.
In addition to her work in academia, Fearn-Banks counsels companies
and organizations on crisis prevention, crisis communications, and
helps them develop crisis communications plans.
In 2006, Scarecrow Press, Inc. will published The Historical
Dictionary of African American Television which
she wrote based on research and her many years of experiences in network
television in Southern California. She is co-editor, with Anthony
Chan, of People to People: An Introduction to Mass Communications
published in 1997 by American Heritage Publishing, a division of Forbes,
Inc. She wrote chapters for two books in recent years: "Crisis
Communications: A Review of Some of the Best Practices"
in Handbook of Public Relations, edited by Robert Heath and Gabriel
Vasquez for Sage Publishing, 2000, and "The Crisis Communications
Plan," in Profolio:Crisis Management and Planning, PRSA
Professional Practices Center, 1998. She has entries in the Encyclopedia
of Public Relations (2005) from Sage Publishing. She has written numerous
articles in journals, magazines, and newspapers. She is a member of the advisory board of the UW Extension Division’s Certificate Program in Public Relations. In Seattle, she has been a member of several non-profit boards. At UW, she is a member of the Faculty Council on Student Affairs. She is also a member of the Writers Guild of America, the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, and Delta Sigma Theta (an international public service organization of African-American women). ### |