Taking Over the Asylum: Empowerment and Mental Health

by Marian Barnes

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One of the most critical developments within `welfare' in recent years, has been the transformation of service users from `passive recipients' to `active subjects' of welfare policy and practice. People who use services have challenged paternalistic notions that professionals are always the experts, and have offered alternative analyses both of the experience of living with disability or illness, and of policy and practice responses to such experiences. Taking Over the Asylum explores the show more way in which users or survivors of mental health services - people too often regarded as `lacking capacity' to make decisions about their own care - have taken action to empower themselves. The authors examine evidence of the impact this action has had on their lives, on services, and on practice in mental health. They argue that disempowerment can be exacerbated by racist and gendered assumptions and they question the way we think about `mental health' and `mental illness' and what it means to live with `madness'. Drawing on the writings of activists and on international research evidence of action by users and survivors, this important book explores different strategies being adopted to achieve change both within the mental health system and in the lives of those who live with psychological distress. The wide-ranging analysis of current debates provides a valuable and clear insight into the potential and dilemmas of collective action by service users and survivors. show less

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A popular book recommended. The change of policy regarding service users from passive patient to active members. Julie Evans Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust

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Author Information

14 Works 35 Members
Marian Barnes is Professor of Social Policy at the University of Brighton, UK. She has researched and written on the experience of care giving of ageing and of mental health difficulties. She has also researched the way service users have sought to shape health and social care services, and different forms of participative policy making. Her show more recent work has reflected on these practices and experience from the perspective of care ethics. show less

Classifications

Genre
Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
362.2Society, government, & cultureSocial problems and social servicesSocial WelfareMental illness
LCC
RA790.5 .B337MedicinePublic aspects of medicinePublic aspects of medicinePublic health. Hygiene. Preventive medicineMental health. Mental illness prevention
BISAC

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English
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Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3