About
Adenike Webb, PhD, is a board-certified music therapist with 20 years of experience. Her clinical work has been in behavioral and mental health settings, serving children through older adults. Her personal and clinical experiences as an Afro-Caribbean woman and immigrant in the United States sparked her research interests in furthering cultural awareness and sensitivity in music therapy practice, research and education. She employs a critical pedagogy in her academic and supervisory roles as a means of encouraging anti-oppressive engagement.
Webb has presented nationally and internationally within the fields of music therapy and psychiatry on topics such as the value of creativity in supporting well-being; systemic oppression and trauma; the academic and professional experiences of Black music therapists; the impact of cultural identity on music therapy training, scholarship and practice; and the role of social justice in music therapy. She served as guest co-editor of the first social justice-focused issue of the journal Music Therapy Perspectives.
Webb is a founding member of the Black Music Therapy Network, Inc., and serves on their steering committee. She is co-host of the podcast Black Creative Healing, which focuses on radical conversations, mindful collaborations and wholistic visioning centering Black communities.