Nour Norris
Nour Norris – Psychotherapist, Counsellor, and Domestic Abuse Consultant
Nour qualified in Foundation Degree Arts in Integrative Counselling from Newman University Birmingham in 2024. She joins The London Psychiatry Centre as a counsellor, psychotherapist, and domestic abuse consultant, offering bilingual therapeutic support.
Nour specialises in working with individuals, couples, and families coping with trauma, domestic abuse, grief, depression, and anxiety. She takes an integrative approach that blends CBT, psychodynamic, and person-centred therapy. What makes her approach unique is the depth of experience she brings, not only as a trained psychotherapist but also as a survivor, campaigner, and reformer. Her clients don’t just receive therapy; they’re met with understanding, advocacy, and real-world insight. Nour integrates her lived experience with evidence-based practices to support clients in their healing journey, helping them reclaim their agency and develop resilience.
In addition to her work with The London Psychiatry Centre, Nour provides therapy to diverse communities, schools, and organisations including the NHS, Police, Fire Brigade, and Victim Support.
Beyond the therapy room, Nour is the founder of SecureLife, a national initiative focused on preventing violence against women and girls through education, early intervention, and systemic reform. She delivers specialist training to police, corporate organisations, counsellors, psychotherapists, and professional bodies such as the BACP on issues such as coercive control, honour-based abuse, stalking, and safeguarding, ensuring that abuse is recognised and acted upon.
Nour has also led a powerful national campaign for Raneem’s Law, a groundbreaking legal reform named in honour of her sister Khaola and niece Raneem, who were tragically failed by the system. Her tireless advocacy resulted in legislative change that strengthened police accountability and protected victims at the earliest signs of danger.
Nour has worked directly with MP Jess Phillips, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, and the Home Office to shape national policy and make victims’ safety a government priority. Her activism has directly saved lives and continues to influence how domestic abuse is addressed across the UK.
Languages: English, Arabic.