Description
Presents examples of Mad Studies in action; initiatives that have been taken, what they have achieved and what can be learned from them
Offers examples and insights from the perspectives of those who have (had) those experiences, and will also explore ways of supporting people oppressed by conventional understandings and systems.
Comprised of 31 chapters written by leading experts, activists and academics
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part 1: Mad Studies and political organising of people with psychiatric experience
1. The international foundations of Mad Studies: Knowledge generated in collective action
2. Reflections on power, knowledge and change
3. Shifting identities as reflective personal responses to political changes
4. A crazy, warrior and "respondona" Peruvian: All personal transformation is social and political
5. Reflections on survivor knowledge and Mad Studies
6. Speaking for ourselves: An early UK survivor activist's account
7. Fostering community responsibility: Perspectives from the Pan African Network of people with psychosocial disabilities
8. Using survivor knowledge to influence public policy in the United States
9. The social movement of people with psychosocial disabilities in Japan: Strategies for taking the struggle to academia
10. Re-writing the master narrative: A prerequisite for mad liberation
Part 2: Situating Mad Studies
11. A genealogy of the concept of "Mad Studies"
12. How is Mad Studies different from anti-psychiatry and critical psychiatry?
13. Mad Studies and disability studies
14. Weaponizing absent knowledges: Countering the violence of mental health law
Part 3: Mad Studies and knowledge equality
15. The subjects of oblivion: Subalterity, sanism, and racial erasure
16. Institutional ceremonies? The (im)possibilities of transformative co-production in mental health
17. "Are you experienced?" The use of experiential knowledge in mental health and its contribution to Mad Studies
18. De-pathologising motherhood
19. The professional regulation of madness in nursing and social work
20. The (global) rise of anti-stigma campaigns
Part 4: Doing Mad Studies
21. Why we must talk about de-medicalization
22. Imagining non-carceral futures with(in) Mad Studies
23. Madness in the time of war: Post-war reflections on practice and research beyond the borders of psychiatry and development
24. The architecture of my madness
25. Re-conceptualising suicidality: Towards collective intersubjective responses
26. De-coupling and re-coupling violence and madness
27. Upcycling recovery: Potential alliances of recovery, inequality and Mad Studies
28. Bodies, boundaries, b/orders: A recent critical history of differentialism and structural adjustment
29. Spirituality, psychiatry, and Mad Studies.
Part 5: Inquiring into the future for Mad Studies
30. Taking Mad Studies back out into the community
31. Interrogating Mad Studies in the academy: Bridging the community/academy divide
32. Madness, decolonisation and mental health activism in Africa
33. Navigating voices, politics, positions amidst peers: Resonances and dissonances in India
34. 'Madness' as a term of division, or rejection
35. Afterword: The ethics of making knowledge together
36. Postscript: Mad Studies in a maddening world
by "Nielsen BookData"