Rod Dubrow-Marshall, PhD, MBPsS, is a Professor of Psychology who developed and is Co-Programme Leader for the MSc Psychology of Coercive Control, and is a Visiting Fellow in the Criminal Justice Hub at the University of Salford, UK. Rod has been researching the psychology of coercion and undue influence including in relationships, families and in cults or extremist groups for over twenty years and developed the evidence based Totalistic Identity Theory to explain and tackle ideological and violent extremism.
Rod is a member of the Board of Directors of the International Cultic Studies Association and is Chair of the ICSA Research Committee and Network and co-Editor of the International Journal of Coercion, Abuse and Manipulation (IJCAM). In 2006, he was awarded The Herbert L. Rosedale Award, jointly with Dr. Paul Martin, for their psychological research on undue influence. He offers private consultations with families and individuals affected by coercive control and is an exit worker and psychologist with the Re-entry Therapy, Information and Referral Network (RETIRN) UK which he co-founded in 2004 with Dr Linda Dubrow-Marshall.
Website: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rod-dubrow-marshall-phd-7a7b6131/
Email: rpdmarshall@gmail.com or r.dubrow-marshall@salford.ac.uk