Crisis and Resolution: Imagination and the Transformation of Psychiatric Care
Bonjour,
Appel à communication pour une session"Crisis and Resolution: Imagination and the Transformation of Psychiatric Care"(W106), EASA 2010 Conference in Maynooth, Ireland (24-27 Aug 2010).
Date limite de soumission : 1er mars 2010
Crisis and Resolution: Imagination and the Transformation of Psychiatric Care
Psychiatry represents an institution at the intersection of social solidarity and exclusion, with the specific configuration of these two elements differing in various historical and cultural contexts. Looking at the history of psychiatric care, one could argue that its evolutions were achieved through various crises (the crisis of the asylum and the anti-psychiatry movement, psychiatry's inability to care for mentally ill living in the streets, human rights abuses.). For various reasons, the resolutions of these crises often relied on the creativity of groups or individuals with very practical consequences for introducing new forms of care - Basaglia's proposals are just one compelling example among many. Often through such creative solutions, all Western countries have undertaken significant reorganization of their psychiatric care systems in the past 50 years, which also inspired changes to psychiatric care in less developed countries.
This workshop calls for reflection on the impact of 'crisis rhetoric' with regard to specific social, political and legal circumstances, and the role of imagination in informing the practices of caring and curing. We aim to confront and compare various configurations of care, including when formal or professional biomedical-oriented care is lacking. Paper could explore how forms of care reflect of the mentally ill reflect specific cultural expectations and ideologies, and how the role of family, community, profession and the state in taking care of the mentally ill is negotiated in different contexts. Papers could also address the ways in which the anthropological perspective and research has been involved in, and is still challenged by these transformations.
Organisatrices : Livia Velpry (CERMES3 - Université Paris 8), livia.velpry@univ-paris8.fr and Lydie Fialova (Edinburgh University), lf@bu.edu
Appel à communication pour une session"Crisis and Resolution: Imagination and the Transformation of Psychiatric Care"(W106), EASA 2010 Conference in Maynooth, Ireland (24-27 Aug 2010).
Date limite de soumission : 1er mars 2010
Crisis and Resolution: Imagination and the Transformation of Psychiatric Care
Psychiatry represents an institution at the intersection of social solidarity and exclusion, with the specific configuration of these two elements differing in various historical and cultural contexts. Looking at the history of psychiatric care, one could argue that its evolutions were achieved through various crises (the crisis of the asylum and the anti-psychiatry movement, psychiatry's inability to care for mentally ill living in the streets, human rights abuses.). For various reasons, the resolutions of these crises often relied on the creativity of groups or individuals with very practical consequences for introducing new forms of care - Basaglia's proposals are just one compelling example among many. Often through such creative solutions, all Western countries have undertaken significant reorganization of their psychiatric care systems in the past 50 years, which also inspired changes to psychiatric care in less developed countries.
This workshop calls for reflection on the impact of 'crisis rhetoric' with regard to specific social, political and legal circumstances, and the role of imagination in informing the practices of caring and curing. We aim to confront and compare various configurations of care, including when formal or professional biomedical-oriented care is lacking. Paper could explore how forms of care reflect of the mentally ill reflect specific cultural expectations and ideologies, and how the role of family, community, profession and the state in taking care of the mentally ill is negotiated in different contexts. Papers could also address the ways in which the anthropological perspective and research has been involved in, and is still challenged by these transformations.
Organisatrices : Livia Velpry (CERMES3 - Université Paris 8), livia.velpry@univ-paris8.fr and Lydie Fialova (Edinburgh University), lf@bu.edu