Patrick Henry Tolan is an American psychologist, academic, and author. He is the Founding Director and now Emeritus Director of the Youth-Nex Center for Effective Youth Development, an Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), and the Charles S. Robb Professor Emeritus at the University of Virginia.
Tolan's research has focused on theory, methods, and policy, related to prevention of child and adolescent mental health and behavior problems and promotion of healthy development. The first half of his career focused on sound risk prediction and testing innovative intervention to prevent delinquency, violence, and related problems of youth. He later shifted to focus on how positive development is promoted. His contributions illuminated a developmental ecology perspective, family dynamics, and community factors that influence youth and adolescent well-being. His scholarly contributions include large-scale randomized-control studies and publications in journals such as Development and Psychopathology, Journal of Clinical Child Psychology, and Journal of Family Psychology. He has also authored book chapters and edited books, including Preventing Youth Substance Abuse: Science-based Programs for Children and Adolescents.
On January 16, 2010, Chicago's City Council and Mayor declared "Patrick H. Tolan Day" in honor of Tolan's contributions to children's and families' mental health. He has also been listed among the Top 2% of Scientists, received the Presidential Award from the Society for Prevention Research (SPR), and the Nicholas Hobbs Award from APA.
Prior to founding the Youth-Nex Center for Effective Youth Development at the University of Virginia, for ten years, Tolan served as director of the Institute for Juvenile Research at the University of Illinois.
Tolan completed his B.A. in Psychology from Temple University in 1978. He earned an M.A. in Psychology and a Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Tennessee in 1980 and 1983, respectively. Between 1983 and 1985, he undertook a Clinical Research Training Program Fellowship at the University of Chicago with Daniel Offer and Bertram Cohler. He began his academic career in 1985 at DePaul University, serving as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology until 1989 followed by an appointment as an Associate Professor from 1989 to 1990. Starting in 1990, he joined the faculty at UIC as Research Director at the Institute of Juvenile Research. From 2002 to 2009, he also held a professorship in the School of Public Health. In 2009, he joined the University of Virginia as a Professor in the School of Education, serving until 2017, with an appointment as the Charles S. Robb Professor until his retirement in 2022. Since 2022, he has been Charles S. Robb Professor Emeritus at the University of Virginia and Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry at UIC since 2009.
Tolan's research has focused on examining child and adolescent development, promoting positive growth, and exploring how disadvantaged neighborhoods, socioeconomic challenges, and environmental stressors impact aggression and well-being. He led the two-decade Chicago Youth Development Study, bringing a focus for longitudinal tracking of risk and resilience among inner-city boys and their families. Among the major findings was that strong family functioning mitigated the effects of community violence exposure, reducing violence perpetration, while poor family dynamics increased risk and perpetuated aggressive behavior. He also launched in 1991, with Nancy Guerra, one of the first randomized trials for violence prevention in impoverished urban communities, empirically demonstrating the benefits of cognitive training and family support groups for reducing risk.
In 2013, Tolan launched the Compassionate Schools Project in Louisville, Kentucky, which assigned schools randomly to a health curriculum emphasizing compassion, social-emotional skills, and health habits. The eight-year study, demonstrated that the '21st century health skills' curriculum reduced behavior problems and increased developmental capabilities, with effects strongest in high-poverty communities.
Tolan chaired the American Psychological Association Task Force on ChildrenâÂÂs Mental Health (2000), from which he and Kenneth Dodge proposed a system prioritizing children's mental health by emphasizing accessible clinical care, prevention, primary care interventions, and culturally competent, family-focused services. Moreover, he documented in one of his monographs that mentoring was effective in reducing juvenile delinquency and related issues, with structured programs yielding positive outcomes in aggression, drug use, and academic achievement.