Larry Morris
Larry A. Morris, Ph.D. is a psychologist with a private clinical and forensic consulting practice in Tucson. He has over 30 years of experience evaluating and treating female, male, adolescent, and adult victims and/or perpetrators of interpersonal violence. He has performed hundreds of forensic evaluations and testified as an expert witness in state, federal, or military courts in cases of murder, rape, assault, domestic violence, and child sexual abuse. He has served as director, consultant, or trainer on several research, demonstration, and training projects funded by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare; National Institute of Mental Health; National Center for Child Advocacy; Office of Education; National Institute of Justice; Office for Victims of Crimes; and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Dr. Morris is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association and one of the founding members and a past president of the National Organization on Male Sexual Victimization (MaleSurvivor). He also served as president of Arizona Psychological Association and Southern Arizona Psychological Association.
Dr. Morris is author or co-author of numerous articles, reports, and book chapters. His books include: Teach Me, Baby Wants to Learn: Birth to 14 Months; Males at Risk: The Other Side of Child Sexual Abuse (with Bolton and MacEachron); The Male Heterosexual: Lust in His Loins, Sin in His Soul?; Dangerous Women: Why Mothers, Daughters, and Sisters Become Stalkers, Molesters, and Murderers; and Hiking the Grand Canyon and Havasupai. He serves on the editorial review board of the Journal of Child Sexual Abuse and as a consulting editor for the American Psychological Association’s journal, Psychology of Men and Masculinity. He is a Professional Member of the Society of Southwestern Authors.
Over the years, Dr. Morris has organized and been invited to participate in symposia, presentations, and workshops at national and international conferences on diverse interpersonal violence and gender issues. He has received numerous awards for outstanding contributions to the field of psychology, including Southern Arizona Psychological Association’s Peter J. Attarian Award, Arizona Psychological Association’s Aaron Cantor Award, and the American Psychological Association’s Karl F. Heiser Presidential Award.
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