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An exceptional showcase of interdisciplinary research, Critical Inquiries for Social Justice in Mental Health presents various critical theories, methodologies, and methods for transforming mental health research and fostering socially-just mental health practices.Marina Morrow and Lorraine Halinka Malcoe have assembled an array of international scholars, activists, and practitioners whose work exposes and disrupts the dominant neoliberal and individualist practices found in contemporary mental research, policy, and practice. The contributors employ a variety of methodologies including intersectional, decolonizing, indigenous, feminist, post-structural, transgender, queer, and critical realist approaches in order to interrogate the manifestation of power relations in mental health systems and its impact on people with mental distress. Additionally, the contributors enable the reader to reimagine systems and supports designed from the bottom up, in which the people most affected have decision-making authority over their formations. Critical Inquiries for Social Justice in Mental Health demonstrates why and how theory matters for knowledge production, policy, and practice in mental health, and it creates new imaginings of decolonized and democratized mental health systems, of abundant community-centred supports, and of a world where human differences are affirmed.
Marina Morrow is a professor and chair of the School of Health Policy and Management at York University.Lorraine Halinka Malcoe is an associate professor of social epidemiology in the Joseph J Zilber School of Public Health at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, and an adjunct professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences at Simon Fraser University
PrefaceIntroduction: Science, Social (In)Justice and Mental HealthLORRAINE HALINKA MALCOE AND MARINA MORROWPart One: Foregrounding Social Justice Theorizing1 "Women and Madness" Revisited: The Promise of Intersectional & Mad Studies FrameworksMARINA MORROW2 A 'Third Space' for Doing Social Justice ResearchVIVIANE JOSEWSKI 3 Global Psychiatrization and Psychic Colonization: The Coloniality of Global Mental HealthCHINA MILLSPart Two: Decolonizing Research and Practice4 Mental Health in Africa: Human Rights Approaches to DecolonizationMOHAMED IBRAHIM5 Dancing with Complexity: Decolonization and Social Justice DialoguesRUBY PETERSON AND SABINA CHATTERJEE 6 Melq’ilwiye: Coming Together: Intersections of Identity, Sovereignty and Mental Health for Urban Indigenous YouthNATALIE CLARK, PATRICK WALTON, JULIE DROLET, TARA TRIBUTE, GEORGIA JULES, TALICIA MAIN & MIKE ARNOUSEPart Three: Gender(ing), Discourse and Power7 Is It Normal or PMS? Women’s Strategies Negotiating and Resisting Negative Premenstrual ChangeJANE M. USSHER AND JANETTE PERZ8 Depression in Workplaces: Governmentality, Feminist Analysis and NeoliberalismKATHERINE TEGHTSOONIAN9 Gender Nonconformity or Psychiatric Noncompliance? How Organized Noncompliance Can Offer a Future without PsychiatryJEMMA TOSHPart Four: Media as a Site of Social (In)Justice10 (De)Pathologization: Transsexuality, Gynecomastia and the Negotiation of Mental Health Diagnoses in Online CommunitiesT. GARNER11 "One in Five": The Prevalence Problematic in Mental Illness DiscourseTANYA TITCHKOSKY AND KATIE AUBRECHT12 Madness in the Media: An Intersectional Analysis of Educational Films and Television Programming, 1940-1969WENDY CHAN AND DOROTHY E. CHUNNPart Five: Refashioning Research for Social Justice Praxis13 Ethics, Research and Advocacy: The Experiences of the NAOMI Patients Association in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver SUSAN BOYD, DAVE MURRAY & NAOMI PATIENTS ASSOCIATION 201314 Using Art-based Methods to Create Research Spaces that Encourage Meaningful Dialogue about Gender, Social Inequity, Recovery and Mental IllnessINDRANI MARGOLIN, TERRY KRUPA, SEAN KIDD, DARRELL BURNHAM, DAWN HEMINGWAY, MICHELLE PATTERSON & DENISE ZABKIEWICZ 15 Disrupting Dominant Discourses: Rethinking Services and Systems for Women with Experiences of AbuseLOUISE GODARD, VIVIANE JOSEWSKI, JILL CORY, ALEXXA ABI-JAOUDE, LORRAINE HALINKA MALCOE & VICTORIA SMYE16 An Intersectionality Approach to Resilience Research: Centring Structural Analysis, Resistance and Social JusticeSARAH CHOWN AND LORRAINE HALINKA MALCOE