Jessica Taylor is a British author and campaigner. She wrote the 2020 book Why Women Are Blamed For Everything. She has made appearances on British television, including BBC Two documentary Womanhood, and in the true crime documentary My Lover, My Killer, which aired on UK’s Channel Five.
Dr Taylor began volunteering with domestic violence victims before earning a Bachelor of Science Hons degree in psychology from the Open University. Upon receiving her degree, she co-founded The Eaton Foundation, a Male Mental Health and Wellbeing Centre in the UK, with Alex Eaton. She eventually founded VictimFocus, which she describes as “a company designed to challenge and change the victim blaming practices in social care, policing, mental health and support services all over the world.
In 2019, Taylor completed her PhD in psychology from the University of Birmingham with a thesis titled “‘Logically, I know I’m not to blame but I still feel to blame’: exploring and measuring victim blaming and self-blame of women who have been subjected to sexual violence.” While working towards her doctoral degree, she was appointed to Chair of the Parliamentary Conference on Violence Against Women and Girls. Upon finishing her doctoral research, she became a Senior Lecturer in Criminal and Forensic Psychology at the University of Derby. She was later recognized for her “contribution to the psychology of victim blaming of women, her work in mental health and her contribution to feminism” by the Royal Society of Arts.
In 2020, she self-published her thesis as a book titled Why Women are Blamed for Everything. Based on three years of doctoral research and ten years of practice with women and girls, the book focuses on the reasons why society and individual psychology blames women for male violence committed against them.
In 2022, she published her second book, Sexy But Psycho: Uncovering the Labelling of Women and Girls through Constable. She described it as a “mixture of academic research, history, psychology and real-life stories of women and girls who have been told that they are mentally ill, instead of being listened to”. Dr Taylor’s book the ITIM (Indicative Trauma Impact Manual) is the world’s first completely trauma-informed manual of its kin, designed to indicate, respond to, and understand every kind of human trauma and emotion.
Dr Jessica Taylor regularly appears on national and international television to discuss violence against women and girls, psychology, victim blaming, mental health and trauma. She also writes screenplays, drama, social experiments, and proposals for TV programmes. Dr Jessica Taylor has been the chartered psychologist on several TV programmes, to advise producers and commissioners on programming about women’s rights and male violence.
Dr Talyor grew up on a council estate in the UK where brutality and coercion were normalised, and where substance abuse was a day-to-day occurrence. Now one of the the UK’s most spirited advocates, Dr Taylor share her own personal journey for the very first time in her latest Sunday Times bestselling book “Underclass”.