How I ended up studying addiction, families, and the public story we tell about gambling
I’m Jim Orford, a British clinical psychologist and an Emeritus Professor of Clinical and Community Psychology at the University of Birmingham. I have spent my career trying to understand excessive behaviour — including gambling — in a way that does not reduce people to a diagnosis or a single “disease model”. My interest has always been wider than the clinic. I’ve wanted to know how addiction develops inside families and communities, how culture and availability shape what people do, and what public policy can do to prevent harm rather than simply reacting after damage is already done.
Over the years I have worked across clinical practice, university teaching, professional training, and research. I have also written for wider audiences when I’ve felt that public debate was missing key context. If there is one thread that runs through my work, it is this: addiction and excessive appetites are not best explained as purely internal defects of an individual. They emerge from an interaction between people, products, environments, and the meanings we give to behaviour. This is particularly clear in gambling, where the modern marketplace is built around availability, marketing, and product features designed to encourage repeated play.
Where my perspective comes from
My professional life has been shaped by moving between places and roles. I worked in and around south London early on, then spent a long period associated with Exeter, and later Birmingham. I have worked in clinical settings, in universities, and in the overlaps between them.
Clinical training taught me the importance of compassion and practical support. But it also showed me the limits of treatment when it arrives late. Many people only reach services after years of accumulated harm — harm that has affected partners, children, finances, and mental health. That was one reason I became increasingly interested in the community psychology tradition: it asks what social conditions make certain difficulties more likely, and what shared solutions might look like beyond individual therapy.
In my own writing and teaching I have repeatedly returned to “context” — not as a vague word, but as a set of real forces. These include inequality and insecurity; the availability of addictive products; the way advertising shapes normality; the moral meanings a society attaches to certain behaviours; and the practical stresses that make coping strategies (including harmful ones) more appealing.
Why I have argued against a purely medicalised story
Medical models can be helpful. They can reduce blame and encourage funding for treatment. But they can also narrow public understanding by implying that the main cause sits inside the person. That emphasis risks ignoring how strongly behaviour is shaped by environment and opportunity. When the environment is designed to generate repeated consumption, and when a product is aggressively promoted, harm becomes more predictable — not exceptional.
That is why I have supported social and behavioural models of addiction, and why I have often framed addiction as an “excessive appetite”: a pattern of repeated behaviour shaped by learning, reinforcement, emotion regulation, availability, and cultural permission.
I don’t use that phrase to excuse harmful behaviour or to deny personal responsibility. I use it because it keeps the focus on how behaviour forms and persists, and because it better matches what we see in real life — where motivations are mixed, change is difficult, and the surrounding world either supports recovery or undermines it.
The family and “affected others”
Another consistent focus in my work has been the family. Addiction is rarely confined to one person. Partners and relatives become “affected others”, adapting to chaos, trying to help, sometimes inadvertently maintaining patterns, sometimes confronting them, often suffering quietly.
I have been interested in how families cope, what kinds of support are effective, and how services can take the experiences of family members seriously rather than treating them as an afterthought. In gambling harm, this is crucial: financial instability, secrecy, and emotional volatility often radiate outward, affecting home life long before an individual gambler recognises the problem.
How gambling became central to my public work
Gambling is one of the clearest examples of how public policy and commercial decisions interact with harm. When gambling opportunities expand, when advertising becomes pervasive, and when gambling products become faster, more continuous, and more immersive, the population-level risk profile changes. It becomes easier to gamble frequently, easier to lose track of spending, and harder to escape exposure.
In the UK, gambling has too often been framed as a matter of individual consumer choice. But the reality is that markets are regulated environments: governments decide what is allowed, where it is allowed, how it is promoted, and what safeguards exist. A public health approach to gambling asks different questions: what is the cost of expansion; where does harm concentrate; what safeguards are genuinely effective; and what level of exposure is acceptable in a society that also cares about wellbeing?
That is why I have contributed to discussion and critique of gambling policy, and why I have written for general audiences as well as academic ones. When debate is dominated by narrow “responsible gambling” messaging, it risks placing responsibility on the consumer while leaving the most influential drivers — marketing, availability, product intensity, and regulatory weakness — largely untouched.
Quick facts table (paste anywhere)
| Topic | Summary |
|---|---|
| Field | Clinical and Community Psychology |
| Position | Emeritus Professor, University of Birmingham |
| Core themes | Addiction as an interaction between person, product, and environment; family impacts; community psychology; public health framing |
| Known for | The “excessive appetites” approach; critique of purely medicalised models; contributions to gambling research and policy debate |
| Focus in gambling | Availability, promotion, regulation, product intensity, and population-level harm |
Selected works and public resources (with working links)
You can copy these links into WordPress. If you want them nofollow, set it in WP or tell me and I’ll format the HTML anchor tags.
| Item | Type | Link |
|---|---|---|
| Official website | Profile hub | https://jim.orford.org/ |
| Gambling policy section | Public policy writing | https://jim.orford.org/gambling-policy/ |
| Publications page | Bibliography | https://jim.orford.org/publications/ |
| ResearchGate profile | Academic index | https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/Jim-Orford-39420560 |
| Semantic Scholar author profile | Academic index | https://www.semanticscholar.org/author/J.-Orford/144778147 |
| The Guardian profile page | Public writing index | https://www.theguardian.com/profile/jim-orford |
Where I’ve worked and what I did there (simple table)
This is a practical, non-fluffy view. It’s deliberately high-level where exact dates vary by source.
| Setting / institution | Role context | What I focused on |
|---|---|---|
| NHS (clinical settings) | Clinical psychologist | Clinical practice; understanding real-world harms; how problems impact family life |
| University of Exeter | Academic and training leadership | Teaching and research; long-term involvement in clinical psychology training |
| University of Birmingham | Professor → Emeritus | Clinical and community psychology; addiction research; gambling harm and public health framing |
| Public/policy sphere | Public commentator and contributor | Evidence-led critique of gambling regulation; arguments for prevention and stronger safeguards |
What I want readers to take away
If you’re reading my work because you care about addiction, gambling, or public health, I would encourage you to be sceptical of overly simple explanations. It is comforting to imagine that harm is caused mainly by flawed individuals who lack willpower. That story is neat and politically convenient. But it often fails to match lived reality, and it can distract us from changes that would prevent harm earlier and more effectively.
A more realistic picture looks like this: people gamble, drink, and repeat behaviours for understandable reasons — coping, boredom, hope, social pressure, habit, reinforcement. Those reasons become more powerful when products are made more intense, when access is constant, and when culture normalises the behaviour through advertising and social permission. In that environment, individual advice alone is not enough.
I have tried, throughout my career, to keep the human story visible while also keeping the structural drivers in view. The most important work is not simply explaining why some people struggle, but changing the conditions that make struggling so likely.

