Description |
1 online resource (xii, 282 pages) |
Contents |
From traitement moral to moral treatment -- Reciprocity in community-based care -- The everyday and interpersonal context of recovery -- Closing the hospital -- The rights and responsibilities of citizenship -- Agency as the basis for transformation |
Summary |
This book sets the recovery movement within the conceptual framework of major thinkers and achievers in the history of psychiatry, such as Philippe Pinel, Dorothea Dix, Adolf Meyer, Harry Stack Sullivan, and Franco Basaglia. It incorporates lessons from related fields, such as psychology, sociology, social welfare, philosophy, political economic theory, and civil rights. From Jane Addams and the Settlement House movement to Martin Luther King, Jr., and Gilles Deleuze, this book identifies the less well-known and less visible dimensions of the recovery concept and movement that underlie concrete clinical practice. The limitations of previous efforts to reform and transform mental health practice, such as the de-institutionalization movement begun in the 1950s, are also highlighted |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Recovery movement -- History
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Social psychiatry.
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Community psychiatry.
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Humanistic psychotherapy.
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Community Mental Health Services -- history
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Community Psychiatry
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History, Modern 1601-
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Mental Disorders -- rehabilitation
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Persons with Psychiatric Disorders -- history
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PSYCHOLOGY -- Mental Health.
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PSYCHOLOGY -- Mental Illness.
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MEDICAL -- Mental Health.
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Community psychiatry
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Humanistic psychotherapy
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Recovery movement
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Social psychiatry
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Genre/Form |
History
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Rakfeldt, Jaak.
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Strauss, John S.
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ISBN |
9780470682982 |
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0470682981 |
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9780470682999 |
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047068299X |
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