Anjula Mutanda
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Anjula Mutanda born of mixed Indian/Ugandan heritage; and mixed religious heritage. Her Ugandan father died of a brain hemorrhage when she was a child.
She is a British broadcaster, social scientist, counselling and relationship psychologist, life coach and celebrity therapist.[1] She studied and trained at Durham University (alumni of Durham university), and also holds senior accredited practitioner status (MBACP)) registered with the BACP. Mutanda was a judge at the Royal Society for Science 2006.[no citations needed here]
She is Fellow of the National Counselling Society as of January 2018.[no citations needed here]
She is Vice President of Relate. Elected 31 October 2018.[no citations needed here]
She has appeared on and presented many prime time popular television programmes giving psychological analysis, such as the Bafta award-winning first series of Big Brother, as well as popular day time shows: Daybreak, BBC Breakfast, Loose Women, The Alan Titchmarsh Show and The Wright Stuff. She was the resident psychologist on ITV's This Morning for several years.[no citations needed here]
Mutanda wrote and presented a programme on Radio 4 called "Diversity Works". This was an in-depth examination on mixed race marriages, and how people overcome barriers in order to make them work successfully.[no citations needed here]
External links
References
- ↑ "The female Asian hot list". Mail Online. 19 October 2006. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-411528/The-female-Asian-hot-list.html. Retrieved 17 September 2014.