An Inclusive History of LGBTQ+ Aversion Therapy Past Harms and Future Address in a UK Context

Open Access
Authors
  • K. Davison
  • K. Hubbard
  • S. Marks
  • H. Spandler
Publication date 2025
Journal Review of General Psychology
Volume | Issue number 29 | 1
Pages (from-to) 33-48
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School of Historical Studies (ASH)
Abstract
From the 1950s, aversion therapy gained an international foothold as a behaviourist means to alter what was then considered ‘deviant’ behaviour. Using primary research by psychologists, psychiatrists andother clinical figures published in professional journals, recently published personal testimonies by those who underwent such ‘treatment’, and drawing on the latest historical research, this article maps aversion therapy practices used to ‘treat’ LGBTQ+ people in the UK, mainly in the1960s and 1970s. We outline our approach to this history and contextualise it by draw attention to ongoing comparative issues of banning LGBT conversion therapy in the present. Next, we outline the
emergence of aversion therapy internationally, and identify historical ‘hotspot’ hospitals and universities in the UK, with the nation itself an international ‘hotspot’ for aversion. We then employ the case study of the 2022 report from the University of Birmingham, to demonstrate how such investigations of difficult pasts might be most effectively realised and highlight the potential for a ‘truth and reconciliation’ approach to this
history. Finally, we call upon psy-organisations, university and research institutions, and other stakeholders to take this history seriously in effort to address past and ongoing harms enacted upon LGBTQ+ people.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1177/10892680241289904
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