Jun 2, 2026

ICSA International Conference 2026: Agenda

 ICSA International Conference 2026

  • Theme: Expanding the scope of coercive control: Understanding abusive dynamics and their impacts across interpersonal, institutional, and cultic contexts
  • Location: Hilton San Diego Bayfront, San Diego, California
  • Dates: July 1–4, 2026

🗓️ Event Schedule Overview
The conference, running from July 1–4, 2026, in San Diego, features a comprehensive agenda on coercive control, including:
  • Wednesday, July 1: Workshops focusing on worldviews, former member experiences, and financial influence.
  • Thursday, July 2: Plenary sessions on ethics and autonomy, followed by breakout sessions on trauma, digital control, and survivor support.
  • Friday, July 3: Sessions covering food/fear in coercive systems, financial trauma, forensic insights, and AI in cults, alongside open discussions.
  • Saturday, July 4: Final presentations regarding identity, legal perspectives, and ethical leadership.
For the complete, detailed, and up-to-date schedule of speakers and sessions, please visit the ICSA conference agenda page.

Thursday, July 2: Plenary sessions on ethics and autonomy, followed by breakout sessions on trauma, digital control, and survivor support
Morning Sessions
  • 07:30 CET – Registration (All day)
  • 08:00 PDT – Coffee and connections (Plenary)
    • Speakers: Carol Merchasin, Debby Schriver
  • 09:00 PDT – Opening remarks and welcome (Plenary)
    • Speaker: Carol Merchasin
  • 09:40 PDT – Ethical dilemmas: Autonomy vs well-being (Plenary)
    • Speaker: Constantine Psimopoulos
  • 10:40 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Childhood trauma and campus cult susceptibility (Room 4) – Dylesia Barner
    • Patriarchy and coercive control across contexts (Room 3) – R. Dubrow-Marshall, L. Dubrow-Marshall, K. Amber
    • Big history context of coercive control (Room 1) – Jeremy Sherman
    • Changing minds & laws: Mandated shunning (Room 2) – P. Haeck, W. Grendele, S. Bapir-Tardy, R. Kelly
    • Traumatic Narcissism and survivor recovery (Room 5) – Daniel Shaw
  • 11:30 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • College student stigma toward high-control groups (Room 4) – Youngjin Choi
    • Cultic dynamics through 'anti-wisdom' lens (Room 1) – Eric Kessler
Afternoon Sessions
  • 12:30 PDT – Lunch Break (90 min)
  • 14:00 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Personality disorders and belief systems (Room 4) – Joyana Santini
    • The Perfect Storm: Cult experience contributions (Room 1) – P. Ryan, R. Bernstein, J. Kelly, E. Falconer, D. Whitsett
    • Internalized control and expressive arts (Room 5) – N. Bigger Stockdale, F. Rosario
    • Story as Sanctuary: Spiritual abuse workshop (Room 5) – Nicole Hardy
  • 14:50 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Harms of Law of Attraction groups (Room 4) – Andrew Jasko
    • Online Christian counter-movements (Room 5) – John-Mark Rieser
  • 15:50 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Research overview: Cults, trafficking, and families (Room 3) – Roderick Dubrow-Marshall
    • Digital environments and cognitive security (Room 5) – Vincent Starnino, Michael Ross
    • Forced labor and cultic economics (Room 2) – Carol Merchasin
  • 16:40 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Coercive dynamics in mainstream religions (Room 3) – Elise Heerde
    • Supporting a loved one who stays (Room 5) – Molly Koshatka
    • Shame in alcohol recovery and trauma (Room 1) – Zoe Lambert
    • Transitioning from scripted belonging (Room 2) – Ryan Lee
  • 17:30 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Dismantling control in Buddhist communities (Room 4) – Maxine Christopher
    • Freedom of Mind in human rights law (Room 3) – Matt Bywater
    • Twelve-year journey inside a cult (Room 5) – Tatiana Badaro
    • Peer-led queer and trans support groups (Room 2) – M. Mora, Micah Damsky
    • Evangelical Christianity and narcissistic control (Room 1) – Andrew Jasko

(Friday, July 3) of the 2026 ICSA International Conference preliminary agenda:
Morning Sessions
  • 08:00 CET – Registration (All day)
  • 09:00 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • The controlled body: Food, fear, and fidelity in coercive systems (Room 5) – Jonna Fries
    • Soft coercion in transformational communities: Ecological and psychological patterns of control (Room 3) – Rebecca Wildbear
    • Scaling clinical competence: Lessons from the Collaborative Certification Training Model of the Lalich Center on Cults and Coercion (Room 2) – Janja Lalich, Natalie Fabert, Melanie Friedman, Kristina Berger, Nichole Nelson
    • Financial trauma after coercive control: Rewriting money scripts for long-term recovery (Room 4) – Heidi Clemons
  • 09:50 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Online solicitation: The new frontier of coercive control (Room 4) – Robin Boyle-Laisure
    • America's cult of wellness: Wellness, wealth and the war on modern medicine (Room 3) – Kim Peirano
    • Sanctified submission: When male headship becomes coercive control in evangelical marriage (Room 1) – Bethany Jantzi
    • The effect of coercive control within purity culture (Room 5) – Elizabeth Sallows, Dresden Andrea
  • 10:50 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • When coercive control becomes a crime: Forensic, clinical, and survivor-centered insights from Finland (Room 4) – Pia Puolakka
    • Interpreting power: Sacred texts and coercive control: Evidence from Jewish sectarian contexts (Room 1) – Lea Lavy
    • Moral injury after religious exit: A qualitative study of former members of high-control faith communities (Room 5) – Windy Grendele
    • EMDR Therapy: Applications for survivors of coercive control (Room 2) – Jonna Fries, Erin Hwasta, Briana Messerschmidt
  • 11:40 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Planned obsolescence in personal growth: Coercion, capitalism and cult dynamics in large group awareness trainings (LGATs) (Room 1) – Dave Boodakian
    • Why media voices matter: The impact of Decult (Room 4) – Anke Ricter
Afternoon Sessions
  • 12:30 PDT – Lunch Break (90 min)
  • 14:00 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Cults and confidence: An examination of cult recruitment rhetoric targeting women and its presence in mainstream confidence culture discourse (Room 4) – Jeannette Mulherin
    • A reckoning in the Troubled Teen Industry: Survivor voices, legal accountability, and institutional harm (Room 2) – Jennifer French Tomasic, Felicia Rosario, Kelly Guagenty
    • How to provide legal support to victims of coercive control who suffer harm in their interpersonal relationships and with institutions (Room 5) – Maleine Picotin-Gueye
  • 14:50 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Posttraumatic growth in survivors of abusive groups: Which factors facilitate recovery? (Room 3) – Andrea Escudero
    • Why trauma disrupts sleep: Understanding insomnia and recovery (Room 1) – Nicole Moshfegh
    • Mandated shunning as coercive control: Legal and human rights perspectives (Room 5) – Savin Bapir-Tardy
  • 15:50 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Fawning as survival instinct: Integrating human biology into therapeutic pathways for healing and restoring agency, post-high control religious group experience (Room 4) – Heidi Hewett
    • Expanding coercive control research through community-based participatory methods (Room 2) – Brooke Harmon, Annjanette Alejano-Steele, Marla Sutherland
    • Shunning and suicide: Much more than silent treatment (Room 3) – Raquel Cuesta
    • Reclaiming spirituality after cult indoctrination (Room 5) – Nicola Ranson, Ronald Auerbacher
  • 16:40 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • When culture becomes the perpetrator: An analysis of how spiritual coercion may be systematized and reproduced across organizational contexts (Room 4) – Fabienne Harford, Rod Dubrow-Marshall
    • Justice delayed or justice served? The High Court appeal of the Unification Church dissolution order and the challenges of the dissolution process (Room 1) – Takashi Yamaguchi
    • ICSA open discussion (Room 2) – Carol Merchasin, Debby Schriver, Jackie Johnson

Saturday, July 4: Final presentations regarding identity, legal perspectives, and ethical leadership.
Morning Sessions
  • 09:00 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Identity (trans)formation following disengagement from High Demand Groups (HDG): Understandings and treatment implications using systems theory (Room 1) – Catherine de Boer
    • How leaderless cults demonstrate coercive control: The pseudo-law sovereign citizen movement (Room 3) – Lynne Feldman
    • The U.S. legal perspective on coercive persuasion (Room 4) – Linda Demaine
    • Beyond intimate partner violence: Developing and validating a coercive control measure for high-control religious groups (Room 5) – Savin Bapir-Tardy
  • 09:50 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Exit costs: The aftermath of cult conditioning and coercive control — Re-traumatization, identity collapse, and the silent pathways back into exploitation (Room 1) – Kelsey Decker
    • When silence speaks in color: Expanding coercive control awareness through art therapy (Room 5) – Natalee Bigger Stockdale
  • 10:50 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Born into captivity: Children raised in cultic systems and the hidden architecture of coercion — An insider perspective from a cult leader's daughter (Room 1) – Sonta Bella
    • Olive Leaf Network: A trans-cultic model of coercive control from survivor-led advocacy in Australasia (Room 2) – Maria Esguerra, Miriam Francis, Lindy Jacomb
    • Coercive control in religious groups and adverse religious childhood experiences: A large-sample quantitative study of Japanese second-generation adults (Room 4) – Martina Bottazzo
    • Black families in religiously abusive organizations: Considerations for mental health providers (Room 5) – Alisha Powell
  • 11:40 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • From dogma to data: Artificial intelligence as a mechanism of coercive control within The Watchtower Society (Room 4)
    • Hypnosis and coercion: What people believe vs. What we know (Room 1) – Steve Eichel
    • After the world of the cult: My 50-plus-year journey with ICSA and beyond (Room 5) – Paul Engel
Afternoon Sessions
  • 12:30 PDT – Lunch Break (90 min)
  • 14:00 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • The Red String Project: Identity, belief, myth & meaning (Room 4) – Liz Gale
    • Coercive control is not just about fringe groups anymore: Using neuroscience to inform recovery from unethical influence across different social contexts (Room 5) – Ronald Burks
  • 14:50 PDT – Concurrent Sessions:
    • Epileptic cult leaders? (Room 4) – Yuval Laor
    • Integrity as antidote: Addressing destructive leadership and coercive control in the modern workplace (Room 5) – Kim Peirano
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