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368 Pages·2015·1.259 MB·English
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Madness, distress and the politics of disablement Edited by Helen Spandler Jill Anderson Bob Sapey MADNESS, DISTRESS AND THE POLITICS OF DISABLEMENT Edited by Helen Spandler, Jill Anderson and Bob Sapey First published in Great Britain in 2015 by Policy Press North America office: University of Bristol Policy Press 1-9 Old Park Hill c/o The University of Chicago Press Bristol 1427 East 60th Street BS2 8BB Chicago, IL 60637, USA UK t: +1 773 702 7700 t: +44 (0)117 954 5940 f: +1 773 702 9756 [email protected] [email protected] www.policypress.co.uk www.press.uchicago.edu © Policy Press 2015 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record for this book has been requested ISBN 978 1 44731 458 5 paperback ISBN 978 1 44731 457 8 hardcover The right of Helen Spandler, Jill Anderson and Bob Sapey to be identified as editors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved: no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior permission of Policy Press. The statements and opinions contained within this publication are solely those of the editors and contributors and not of the University of Bristol or Policy Press. The University of Bristol and Policy Press disclaim responsibility for any injury to persons or property resulting from any material published in this publication. Policy Press works to counter discrimination on grounds of gender, race, disability, age and sexuality. Cover design by Policy Press Front cover image kindly supplied by Jill Anderson Printed and bound in Great Britain by CMP, Poole Policy Press uses environmentally responsible print partners Contents About the authors v Foreword by Jenny Morris xiii Introduction 1 Bob Sapey, Helen Spandler and Jill Anderson Part One: Disjunctures between disability and madness one Unreasonable adjustments? Applying disability policy to 13 madness and distress Helen Spandler and Jill Anderson two What we talk about when we talk about disability: making sense 27 of debates in the European user/survivor movement Jasna Russo and Debra Shulkes three Inconvenient complications: on the heterogeneities of 43 madness and their relationship to disability Nev Jones and Timothy Kelly four Unsettling impairment: mental health and the social model of 57 disability William J Penson Part Two: Theorising distress and disablement five Towards a socially situated model of mental distress 69 Jerry Tew six The Capabilities Approach and the social model of mental health 83 Jan Wallcraft and Kim Hopper seven Psycho-emotional disablism in the lives of people experiencing 99 mental distress Donna Reeve Part Three: Applying social models of disability eight Psycho-emotional disablism, complex trauma and women’s 115 mental distress Shelley Briggs and Fiona Cameron nine Linking ‘race’, mental health and a social model of disability: 127 what are the possibilities? Frank Keating ten Social models of disability and sexual distress 139 Meg John Barker and Alex Iantaffi iii Madness, distress and the politics of disablement eleven The social model of disability and suicide prevention 153 Helen Spandler interviews David Webb Part Four: Universalising disability policy twelve Advancing the rights of users and survivors of psychiatry using 171 the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities An interview with Tina Minkowitz thirteen UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities: out of 183 the frying pan into the fire? Mental health service users and survivors aligning with the disability movement Anne Plumb fourteen The global politics of disablement: assuming impairment and 199 erasing complexity China Mills fifteen Disabilities, colonisation and globalisation: how the very 215 possibility of a disability identity was compromised for the ‘insane’ in India Bhargavi V Davar Part Five: Meeting places sixteen Neurodiversity: bridging the gap between the disabled people’s 231 movement and the mental health system survivors’ movement? Steve Graby seventeen Distress and disability: not you, not me, but us? 245 Peter Beresford eighteen ‘It’s complicated’: blending disability and mad studies in the 261 corporatising university Kathryn Church nineteen Solidarity across difference: organising for democratic alliances 271 Mick McKeown and Helen Spandler twenty Beyond the horizon: the landscape of madness, distress and 287 disability Jill Anderson, Helen Spandler and Bob Sapey References 293 Index 333 iv About the authors Editors Helen Spandler works as a reader in mental health in the School of Social Work at the University of Central Lancashire, UK. She has written extensively in the area of madness/distress including the books Asylum to Action (2006) and Beyond Fear and Control (co-edited 2007). She is also on the editorial collective of Asylum: The Magazine for Democratic Psychiatry (www.asylumonline.net). Jill Anderson coordinates the national Mental Health in Higher Education project (MHHE), which aims to enhance networking and the sharing of approaches to learning and teaching about mental health. She has worked as a mental health social worker, has taught on qualifying and post-qualifying social work programmes and facilitates a national network (DUCIE) for service user and carer involvement workers based in UK universities. Jill is currently enrolled on the Doctoral Programme in Educational Research at Lancaster University. Bob Sapey is a retired university lecturer who has written many papers on community care policy and practice, the role of technology in social care and more recently has challenged coercive social work practice with voice hearers. He is co-author of Social Work with Disabled People (1999, 2006 and 2012). Contributors Meg John Barker is a writer, academic, psychotherapist and activist specialising in sex and relationships. Meg John is a senior lecturer in psychology at the Open University and has published many academic books and papers on topics including open non-monogamies, sadomasochism, counselling and mindfulness, as well as co-editing the journal Psychology and Sexuality. They were the lead author of The Bisexuality Report and run many public events including Sense about Sex, Critical Sexology, and Gender and Sexuality Talks. Meg John is the author of the book and blog Rewriting the Rules www.rewriting- the-rules.com. Twitter: @megbarkerpsych. v Madness, distress and the politics of disablement Peter Beresford OBE is professor of social policy at Brunel University London. He is a long-term user of mental health services and co-chair of Shaping Our Lives, the independent service users’ and disabled people’s organisation and network. He has a longstanding involvement in issues of participation as an activist, educator, researcher and writer. He is author of A Straight Talking Guide to Being a Mental Health Service User, PCCS Books. Shelley Briggs has a long history of working with trauma. Originally from Canada, she supported survivors of sexual abuse in the Scottish Highlands before completing her MSW in Dundee, and then worked with perpetrators and victims of sexual abuse in community and prison settings. Shelley went back to Canada and worked in mental health services in remote and northern communities for a few years and then returned to the UK to lecture in social work and social policy at the University of Central Lancashire, where she continues to be interested working with survivors, as well as looking at alternative practice with greater links to communities. Fiona Cameron has worked in community mental health setting in the North West of England for a number of years. After training as an approved social worker (ASW) she was project manager of The Sanctuary, a residential crisis service run by Turning Point as an alternative to hospital admission. She has also worked as a mental health trainer with Richmond Fellowship; co-ordinator of an ASW training programme at Liverpool John Moores University; and a social worker at Guild Lodge, Forensic Unit working primarily with women. Fiona then worked for the Disability Advisory Unit at University of Central Lancashire where she is now a senior lecturer in the School of Social Work. Kathryn Church is associate professor and director for the School of Disability Studies at Ryerson University in Toronto. For the past decade, she has been part of key initiatives that have brought the School’s ‘vision, passion, action’ message to life across the university and in the public eye. As a researcher, Kathryn has been allied with the mad movement for 25 years. Author of Forbidden Narratives: Critical Autobiography as Social Science (1995) and co-editor of Learning through Community (2008) she wrote a dozen documents for psychiatric survivor-led organizations doing local economic development. She is an award-winning curator of arts-informed research and a dedicated instructor. vi About the authors Bhargavi V Davar completed her doctoral research into the ethical and epistemological foundations of the mental and behavioural sciences in 1995. She is involved in the women’s movement and is author of Mental Health of Indian Women (Sage 1999), editor of Mental Health from a Gender Perspective (Sage 2001) and co-author with Sundari Ravindran of Gendering Mental Health: Knowledges, Identities and Institutions (Oxford UP, forthcoming). She writes on the place of indigenous mental healing within public discourse, and on the colonial histories of psychology and psychiatry. She established the Bapu Trust for research on Mind and Discourse in 1999, a research and service provider devoted to social science, cultural and historical research on mental health practices and policies in India. Bhargavi Davar is a survivor of psychiatry, and is a trained arts-based therapist who works with people in crisis, particularly young people. She is global advisor to Human Rights Watch, a working group member of the UNESCAP on Incheon Strategy, Decade of persons with disabilities 2013-22. Steve Graby is an autistic adult who was diagnosed at the age of 22, while in the final year of a politics degree. Coincidentally, he discovered the social model of disability around the same time, which led to involvement with the disabled people’s movement, including the Disabled People’s Direct Action Network and, more recently, Greater Manchester Coalition of Disabled People. He is now, after having been lucky enough to secure funding, working towards a PhD in disability studies at the University of Leeds, while hoping to find ways to fit some activism around the time constraints of this. Kim Hopper is a medical anthropologist who works as a research scientist at the Nathan S Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research (USA), where he co-directs the Center for the Study of Recovery in Social Contexts. He also teaches at Columbia University’s School of Public Health and Law and consults at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks. Since 1979, he has undertaken ethnographic and historical research on psychiatric care and homelessness, chiefly in New York City. For the last several years, he has co-directed a field school to teach research methods to persons with extensive mental health histories Alex Iantaffi is a systemic psychotherapist, licensed marriage and family therapist, public health researcher and community activist. He is an assistant professor at the Program in Human Sexuality, University of Minnesota (USA) and is the editor-in-chief for Sexual and Relationship Therapy. Alex has researched and published on various aspects of gender, vii Madness, distress and the politics of disablement disability, and sexuality for the past two decades. His clinical work is focused on issues of human sexuality and gender identity across the lifespan. Twitter: @xtaffi Nev Jones is a critical community psychologist and postdoctoral fellow in psychiatric anthropology at Stanford University (USA) with a background in continental philosophy. Her current research focuses on the phenomenology and sociopolitical context(s) of psychosis, early intervention in community-based settings, and identity development. Frank Keating is a senior lecturer in health and social care in the Department of Social Work at Royal Holloway University of London (UK). His main research interests are ethnicity, gender and mental health, particularly focusing on African and Caribbean communities. He continues to advocate for racial equality in mental health services through his writing, teaching and public speaking. Timothy Kelly is a PhD student in the Department of Rehabilitation and Counsellor Education with a minor focus in anthropology at the University of Iowa (USA). He is interested in transdisciplinary work focused on experiences often falling under the description of psychosis, attending to both sociocultural structure and lived experience, and bridging the gap between theoretical and applied work in community mental health and public advocacy. Mick McKeown is reader in democratic mental health in the School of Health at University of Central Lancashire (UK). Mick has a strong commitment to equalities and critical perspectives in service provision and has been active at a professional and practical level around such issues as advocacy, service user and carer involvement and the complexities of addressing civil liberties within the constraints of secure units and wider mental health services. He has published widely and co-ordinated the production of the collectively written text: Service User and Carer Involvement in Education for Health and Social Care (Wiley-Blackwell). Mick has been a UNISON activist for all of his working life. China Mills is a lecturer in critical educational psychology at the University of Sheffield’s School of Education. She is the author of the book Decolonizing Global Mental Health: The Psychiatrization of the Majority World (Routledge 2014). China’s research interests lie in the intersections and interconnections between psychiatry, colonialism, viii About the authors and the pharmaceutical industry. She is currently critically engaged in exploring how the psy-disciplines intervene into poverty at both national and international levels – or what might be called the psychiatrisation of poverty. China has previously worked alongside the hearing voices movement in the UK, and with non-governmental organisations doing mental health work in India. Tina Minkowitz represented the World Network of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry in the drafting and negotiation of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). She served on the steering committee of the International Disability Caucus and was a member of the 40-person drafting group that created the official text of the treaty for negotiation. She is credited with much of the paradigm-shifting character of the CRPD in the areas of legal capacity, liberty and respect for integrity of the person. Ms Minkowitz is an attorney admitted in the state of New York. She is a survivor of psychiatry and believes in the development of authentic user/survivor perspectives in human rights. William J Penson is a disabled PhD research student at the University of Central Lancashire, an associate lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University, a part-time lecturer at the University of Bradford and a part-time trainer with Community Links, a mental health charity in Leeds (UK). In addition, he worked in mental health practice for 12 years before working as a senior lecturer and teacher fellow at Leeds Metropolitan University for nine years. His current research interests include postcolonial perspectives in mental health and disability discourse. Anne Plumb identifies as a mental health system survivor. She has been a member of the former Survivors Speak Out in the UK, including two years as treasurer, and of a small training collective, Distress Awareness Training Agency (DATA). When domestic circumstances made such involvements difficult she began to organise material she had at home into two archives: one is that of grassroots disabled activist Ken Lumb, her late partner; the other is of mental health survivors and their allies. She is currently a member of a survivor history group. Anne can be contacted at [email protected]. Donna Reeve is an honorary teaching fellow at the Centre for Disability Research and the Division of Health Research at Lancaster University. Her publications and research interests are related to ix

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.