Seeking Stories of Professionals Experiencing Unfair Treatment Due to Their Work with MAPs

B4U-ACT is collecting stories of scholars and helping professionals who have been censured for, or otherwise discouraged from, acting or speaking in defense of the humanity, dignity, or civil/human rights of minor-attracted persons (MAPs). If you have had a relevant experience or have felt that the current academic/professional environment has a chilling effect on your ability to act ethically or to speak up on this topic, we would like to hear about it. Your story can be as anonymous or public as you like.

If you are willing to help, please go to b4uact.org/injustice-profs/ for more information and to submit a description of your experience. Please forward this message to other professionals you feel might be able to assist in this endeavor, or post on professional email listservs if appropriate.


Seeking Stories of MAPs Facing Injustice in the Mental Health System

B4U-ACT is collecting stories of MAPs who have experienced violations of their human or civil rights by the mental or behavioral health systems. If you have had such an experience, we would like to hear about it. Your story can be as anonymous or public as you like. We will not ask for any information that could trigger mandatory reporting.

If you are willing to help, please go to b4uact.org/injustice-maps/ for more information and to submit a description of your experience. Please forward this message to other MAPs you feel might be able to assist in this endeavor.


B4QR Volume 3, Issue 4 Out Now

The Autumn 2023 issue of the B4U-ACT Quarterly Review has just been released and is available here.


This issue concludes the third volume of B4QR, and includes short critical summaries of six studies published between June and July 2023. Also included is a response from Amy Lawrence to one of the reviews featured the issue. The featured scholar in the “Meet The New Generation” section of this issue is Agatha Chronos, a Psychology PhD Candidate at the University of Bergen in Norway. The full text is available to read for free on our site.

b4uact.org/b4qr/vol3/autumn2023/


B4U-ACT is now on the Fediverse

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B4QR Volume 3, Issue 3 Out Now

The Summer 2023 issue of the B4U-ACT Quarterly Review has just been released and is available here.


This issue continues the third volume of B4QR, and includes short critical summaries of six studies published between September 2022 and June 2023. The issue also includes one response from a researcher to a review featured in the Spring 2023 issue. The featured scholar in the “Meet The New Generation” section of this issue is Étienne Garant, a PhD student in Criminology at Université de Montréal. The full text is available to read for free on our site.

b4uact.org/b4qr/vol3/spring2023/


B4QR Volume 3, Issue 2 Out Now

The Spring 2023 issue of the B4U-ACT Quarterly Review has just been released and is available here.


This issue continues the third volume of B4QR, and includes short critical summaries of six studies published between October 2022 and March 2023. The issue also includes responses from two researchers to reviews featured in the Winter 2023 issue. The featured scholar in the “Meet The New Generation” section of this issue is Desiree Elchuck, an MSc candidate at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax, Canada. The full text is available to read for free on our site.

b4uact.org/b4qr/vol3/spring2023/


B4QR Volume 3, Issue 1 Out Now

The Winter 2023 issue of the B4U-ACT Quarterly Review has just been released and is available here.


This issue begins the third volume of B4QR, and includes short critical summaries of six studies published between April and December 2022. The issue also includes responses from three researchers to reviews featured in the Autumn 2022 issue. The featured scholar in the “Meet The New Generation” section of this issue is Julia Levitan, a PhD candidate at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. The full text is available to read for free on our site.

Click here to display content from www.b4uact.org.


B4QR Volume 2, Issue 4 Out Now

The Autumn 2022 issue of the B4U-ACT Quarterly Review has just been released and is available here.


This issue concludes the second volume of B4QR, and includes short critical summaries of six studies published between July and November 2022. The issue also includes a response from Dr. Christian Joyal to a review featured in the Summer 2022 issue, as well as a reply from Editor-In-Chief Allen Bishop. The featured scholar in the “Meet The New Generation” section of this issue is Dr. Evelyn Thorne, a postdoctoral fellow at the Moore Center for the Prevention of Child Sexual Abuse at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. The full text is available to read for free on our site.

Click here to display content from www.b4uact.org.


B4QR Volume 2, Issue 3 Out Now

The Summer 2022 issue of the B4U-ACT Quarterly Review has just been released and is available here.


This issue continues the second volume of B4QR, and includes short critical summaries of six studies published between February and May 2022. The issue also includes a meta-analysis conducted by the B4QR team using recently published data on sexual victimization, pedophilic interest, and antisociality. The featured scholar in the “Meet The New Generation” section of this issue is Amy Lawrence, a doctoral candidate at the University of Auckland in New Zealand. The full text is available to read for free on our site.

Click here to display content from www.b4uact.org.


Remembering Michael Melsheimer

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Today, Mike Melsheimer, who founded B4U-ACT along with board chair Russell Dick in 2003, would have been 80 years old. Mike was born August 21, 1942 in Jacksonville, FL, the son of the late Richard L. and Nancy R. Ison Melsheimer. He spent his career working in the social services sector. In 1993, he moved to Maryland to seek mental health services from Dr. Fred Berlin in his effort to live authentically and productively as an “out” MAP. Through his volunteer work at a state psychiatric hospital, he met Russell Dick, then a social worker at the hospital, who went on to become the Director of Social Work.

As the two of them became close friends, they became convinced of the need for a non-profit organization to promote the understanding and humane treatment of minor-attracted people within the mental health field. In 2002, Mike launched a one-man campaign which incessantly challenged the Maryland Mental Hygiene Administration (as it was called at that time) to identify a single mental health practitioner or agency in the state that publicly advertised services for “persons like myself” before they broke the law. His dogged persistence resulted in a small annual grant from the state to establish and maintain B4U-ACT, develop a hotline to connect MAPs with therapists in Maryland, and sponsor workshops for practitioners. Mike also successfully procured from the IRS the 501(c)3 status for the organization.

Mike’s advocacy work was not limited to MAPs. His volunteer work at the Maryland state psychiatric hospital involved championing the rights of the patients there. He also received local media coverage for calling public attention to safety issues at the low-income housing complex for senior citizens in which he lived.

After serving as Director of Operations for B4U-ACT for seven years, Mike’s deteriorating health forced him to step down, but he continued to influence the organization’s vision and direction by participating in its events as much as he could. On July 15, 2010, Mike died peacefully after battling emphysema for several years.

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