Available Formats
Banning Conversion Therapy: Legal and Policy Perspectives
By (Author) Ilias Trispiotis
Edited by Craig Purshouse
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
5th June 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Law and society, gender issues
Human rights, civil rights
Comparative law
Paperback
432
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book looks at why and how states should legally ban LGBTQ+ conversion therapy. Few states have legislated against the practice, with many currently considering its legal ban. Banning Conversion Therapy brings together leading academics, legal and medical practitioners, policymakers, and activists to illuminate the legislative and non-legislative steps that are required to protect individuals from the harms of conversion therapy in different contexts. The book considers how best to address this complex and interdisciplinary legal problem which cuts across human rights law, criminal law, family law, and socio-legal studies, and which represents one of the key contemporary problems of LGBTQ+ equality and national and international human rights activism.
A powerful legal case against unethical, harmful and ineffective conversion practices. * Peter Tatchell, Director of Peter Tatchell Foundation *
This much-needed collection of interdisciplinary scholarship is an ideal primer for policymakers, advocates, and laypeople seeking to understand the history, forms, targets, and harms of so-called conversion therapy as well as policy remedies for ending these cruel and pervasive practices. The chapter authors share expert insights for navigating the thorniest social, developmental, religious, and legal issues any ban on these practices would raise. * Jessica Stern, US Special Envoy to Advance the Human Rights of LGBTQI+ Persons *
Ilias Trispiotis is Professor of Human Rights Law at School of Law, University of Leeds, UK. Craig Purshouse is Senior Lecturer at the School of Law and Social Justice, University of Liverpool, UK.