2026 Professional Conference

Toward a Shared Goal: Uniting Researchers, Providers, and Community to Promote a Better Understanding of MAPs

Friday-Sunday, June 12-14, 2026 (Register by June 1)

Join us in the beautiful American Southwest* to network and learn from each other. We welcome clinicians, researchers, educators, students, and professionals from diverse fields, as well as minor-attracted people (MAPs) and their family members and friends.

  • Clinicians will learn to apply evidence-based therapeutic skills when working with MAPs.
  • Scholars will share emerging research, discuss research methodology, and gain a vision for future directions.
  • MAPs will strengthen skills for coping with the effects of stigma.
  • All attendees will gain an improved understanding of MAPs’ needs and lived experiences, and apply it to their professional work or personal lives.

Practitioners can receive 11.25 CEUs through the Maryland Board of Social Work Examiners. If you’re outside of Maryland, check whether your professional licensing board accepts them.

*The conference will be held at a conveniently located venue in a scenic and historic city in the American Southwest. A limited number of rooms will be available for lodging at the conference venue (reservation deadline: May 22, 2026). Exact location and reservation information will be provided to attendees after their registration is approved. Click here if you need more specific location information sooner. 

Plans are in development for virtual attendance for the first keynote and subsequent three sessions on Saturday. Further information about this option will be announced on this page when available.

We’re still accepting poster proposals from graduate students in social work, psychology, criminology, sociology, law, public health, gender/sexuality studies, and other relevant fields. The submission deadline is April 15, 2026. Click here for more information.

Read what others have said about the impact of our past conferences.

Keynote Speaker: Dr. Ian McPhail, PhD, CPsych is a licensed clinical psychologist and a Research Associate at MOORE, a center at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health focused on preventing child sexual abuse. He is a founding member of Talking for Change, the first helpline and treatment program in Canada focused on the secondary prevention of child sexual abuse perpetration. His research centres on psychotherapeutic change processes in sexual violence prevention programs, pedophilia, psychological risk factors for child sexual offenses, and measurement issues in forensic psychology. He is also a clinician with experience across correctional, forensic mental health, and general mental health settings.

Keynote Speaker: The Reverend David M. Ortmann, LCSW, CMBT, OSM is a psychotherapist and sex therapist who launched his private practice in San Francisco in 2004, later becoming bicoastal with a 2014 expansion to New York City. His work has since broadened to include supervision, consultation, coaching, and spiritual and secular counseling as an ordained minister. He now serves sexual minorities worldwide, offering guidance, recovery, and radical self-acceptance through affirming, non-pathologizing care shaped by decades of close, respectful engagement with diverse communities.

Nadav Antebi-Gruszka (they/them), PhD, LMHC, LPC is in private practice in NYC proudly serving and celebrating sexual and gender diverse people, and especially MAPs. Outside of clinical work, Nadav conducts research and training workshops promoting affirming care for marginalized groups, including MAPs, LGBTQ+ folx, and fat people.

Crys Carman (she/her), MSW, MFA is a PhD student in Social Work at the University of Iowa, where her research focuses on stigma, reintegration, and the social construction of deviance. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing, and she has served on the editorial board of B4QR since June of 2025. Her interests include reading science fiction, browsing thrift shops, and filling her living spaces with plants.

Dr. Maggie Ingram (she/her), PhD, MHS is an Assistant Scientist with the Center for Violence Prevention Research. Maggie is also the former Assistant Director of Science and long-time volunteer for B4U-ACT. Her research focuses on three primary topic areas: preventing child sexual abuse, preventing and responding to problematic sexual behavior among youth, and improving mental health and social support among people attracted to children.

Sadat Iqbal, LMSW is a social worker and public health practitioner with 15 years of experience in harm reduction, sexual health services, training design, curriculum development, and organizational capacity building. He is skilled in developing and facilitating workshops, creating educational tools, and supporting providers serving populations with special needs, including people who use drugs, LGBTQIA+ and MAPs. He is committed to health equity, trauma-informed practice, and culturally responsive care.

Dr. Richard Kramer (he/him), PhD has been with B4U-ACT since 2006, currently serving as Education Director. He leads the planning of conferences, organizes the monthly online Dialogue on Therapy meetings, and networks with therapists who help to educate other professionals about the mental health needs of MAPs. He first realized he was exclusively attracted to minors in his early adulthood.

Mark Lassoff is the Executive Director of OnwardWell Foundation, a nonprofit organization providing recovery support to minor-attracted individuals and other young men and adolescents with potentially problematic sexual behaviors. OnwardWell offers practical case management, therapeutic coaching, peer support groups, and family guidance to dozens of MAP clients without regard to their ability to pay. Mark is a B4U-ACT signatory and a strong advocate for relationship-based mental health and support services for adolescents and young men. He is also the author of Pathway to Accountability and Growth, a recovery workbook currently used in programs in several countries. He is completing graduate-level research in social work focused on expanding compassionate, evidence-informed, relationship-based services for highly stigmatized populations. Mark collaborates closely with therapists, families, schools, and community systems to create integrated, safety-focused support programs that help clients build healthy, meaningful lives.

Dr. James Peak (he/him), MD is a retired psychiatrist and MAP who has written both a memoir (Stupid Brain) and a self-help book (A Map for MAPs).  He loves hiking, indie pop, and Christian mysticism.

Alexandra Roth (she/her), LCSW serves on the Board of Directors of B4U-ACT, and maintains a private psychotherapy practice in Northern Virginia. She is a signatory of the B4U-ACT Therapist List and has been providing respectful, client-centered therapy to MAPs for eleven years. Her interests include the ideas of Carl Jung, literary novels, and indie rock music.

Jessica VerBout (she/her), M.A., LMFT, CST, CST-S has over 17 years of experience as a Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist, AASECT Certified Sex Therapist & Supervisor, and Certified Brainspotting Therapist specializing in sex therapy, intimacy issues, and trauma. She provides compassionate, sex-positive, and strength-based therapy to individuals navigating complex sexual concerns, including sexual behaviors that feel out of control (“sex addiction”), desire struggles, minor attracted people, and uncommon attractions. In addition to her clinical work, Jessica offers professional training and supervision, equipping therapists with the knowledge and skills to work with these populations in a research-informed, ethical, and compassionate manner.

Keynote Talks

  • Pedohebephilia: Latest Research and Future Directions, Dr. Ian McPhail, PhD, CPsyc
  • The Reverend David M. Ortmann, LCSW, CMBT, OSM

Clinical Sessions

  • Standards of Care for Therapeutic Work with MAPs
  • Clinical Case Studies in MAP-Affirming Care
  • Stigma and Shame among MAPs
  • The Rising Tide of Compassionate Care: Addressing the Care Deficit for MAPs with Disabilities and How This Helps all MAPs
  • Ethical Treatment Approaches for MAPs with Illegal Image Use Histories
  • Maintaining Trust Under Legal Constraints: Mandated Reporting in MAP Clinical Work
  • Sex Positive Approaches to Working with MAPs

Research-Oriented Sessions

  • Research Methodology and Ethics
  • Future Directions for MAP Research
  • The Neurobiology of Sexuality
  • Facilitating Dialog and Collaboration between Researchers and MAPs 

MAP Self-Help Sessions

  • Distress Tolerance Skills-Building Workshop
  • Challenging Anti-MAP Biases Without Outing Yourself
  • MAPs and Spirituality
  • MAP Self-Expression Through Art 

General Interest Sessions

  • Humanizing Care: A Collaborative Training Model to Reduce Stigma Toward MAPs among Mental Health Professionals
  • Outside Looking In: A MAP’s Experience as a Mandated Treatment Provider
  • Questioning the Non-offending vs. Offending Dichotomy
  • The Influence of Moral Panic on Research and Treatment

Poster Session

We invite graduate students from a variety of disciplines—including but not limited to social work, psychology, criminology, sociology, law, public health, and gender/sexuality studies—to submit proposals for a poster session. The submission deadline is April 15, 2026. Click here for more information.

Friday evening, June 12

7:00 – 9:30Check-in
7:30 – 9:30 Meet-and-greet with hors d’oeuvres

Saturday, June 13

8:00 – 8:45Check-in
8:45 – 12:30Morning sessions
12:30 – 1:30Lunch provided
1:30 – 5:00Afternoon sessions
8:00 – 10:00Social event

Sunday, June 14

8:45 – 12:30Morning sessions
12:30 – 1:30Lunch provided
1:30 – 4:10Afternoon sessions

Registration is open to professionals, researchers, educators, graduate students in the fields of mental health, human sexuality, and other relevant fields. Mental health practitioners who attend can receive 11.25 CEUs through the Maryland Board of Social Work Examiners.

MAPs and their family members and friends may also attend, and they may register under pseudonyms to protect their identities. For payment of the registration fee, they may wish to purchase a pre-paid debit card (found at many grocery, big box, and drug stores) and activate it with pseudonymous information, using the same information when using it to pay the registration fee. Payment may also be made by sending cash or money order to B4U-ACT, Inc., P.O. Box 1754, Westminster, MD 21158. Money orders can often be purchased without sender information from Western Union or a U.S. post office.

We’re committed to increasing diversity at our conferences. BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color), Trans/Non-binary/gender diverse attendees, and Minor-Attracted women can receive a 10% discount on conference fees by using discount code UNDERREP.

Financial Assistance: We provide financial support to a limited number of attendees with unique backgrounds or perspectives not previously represented at the conference and to those who would consider future B4U-ACT involvement but cannot reasonably afford to attend. Click here to apply for financial assistance by March 8 and register after you receive a decision on your application. We encourage supporters who are able to do so to donate to the financial assistance fund.

Registration fees:

  • Sustainer Tier: $299: This tier is for those who can comfortably meet their basic needs and have discretionary income. Your support helps subsidize lower-cost registrations for others and sustains our ability to host future conferences. If you’re able to give a little more, we invite you to choose this tier with gratitude.
  • Standard Tier: $229: This tier reflects the estimated true per-person cost of the conference. If you can attend without significant financial strain, we encourage you to register at this level. Your participation helps us minimize losses while keeping the event accessible to others.
  • Access Tier: $129: This tier is for up to 20 individuals with limited financial resources for whom paying the standard fee would prevent them from attending — due to student status, unemployment, or other financial challenges.
  • Pay It Forward (optional): If you’re able, please consider adding a donation of any amount to your registration. Your contribution will help cover the cost for someone who might not otherwise be able to attend. Thank you for helping build a more inclusive and supportive space.

Underrepresented Groups: 10% discount for BIPOC, Trans/Non-binary/gender diverse, and Minor-Attracted women. Use the discount code UNDERREP.

Important Deadlines:

  • Application for financial assistance: March 8
  • Lodging reservations at conference hotel: May 22 (but rooms may run out earlier)
  • Registration: June 1 (Financial assistance applicants should register after receiving a decision on their application.)

Holding this conference requires considerable financial resources, and B4U-ACT is a 501(c)(3) organization operated solely by volunteers on donations. If you believe in the value of this conference, please consider donating toward conference expenses or to the financial assistance fund to permit attendance by those who otherwise would be unable to attend. U.S. donations are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.