This paper examines conflicts in polices in England and Wales pertaining to the demand for alternative, non-medical crisis support for those experiencing ‘psychosis’. We examine the limitations of current treatment, policy and legislative frameworks in supporting these demands. In particular, we focus on the limitations of prevailing conceptualisations of ‘human rights’, ‘social inclusion’ and ‘recovery’. These concepts, we argue, are embedded within a broader treatment framework which renders medication as mandatory and all other treatment modalities as inherently subsidiary, and a broader policy framework which is complicit with bio-medical orthodoxies of ‘mental illness’ and prioritises treatment compliance and compulsion. Therefore, in ...
Mental health laws worldwide authorise involuntary hospitalisation and treatment of persons with men...
Current English law has few controls on the involuntary treatment of persons detained under the Ment...
AbstractIntroductionIn the regulation of involuntary treatment, a balance must be found between duti...
The past decade has seen a significant growth in attention to the human rights of persons with disab...
This historically situated, UK-based review of New Labour's human rights and mental health policy fo...
The powers enshrined in mental health legislation go directly to fundamental principles central to a...
A human rights approach to the policing of mental ill-health raises fundamental questions about the ...
A human rights approach to the policing of mental ill-health raises fundamental questions about the ...
AbstractThe use of detention for psychiatric treatment is widespread and sometimes necessary. Intern...
Except for the criminal justice system, the Mental Health Act 1983 (as amended by the MHA 2007) is t...
The use of detention for psychiatric treatment is widespread and sometimes necessary. International ...
Globally, established practice in mental health services has tended to be codified into law in ways ...
This study sought to investigate the barriers to non-medical residential crisis support being develo...
This article considers the role of treatment in the provision of mental health care in England and W...
The reform of the Mental Health Act in 2007 saw the introduction of SupervisedCommunity Treatment Or...
Mental health laws worldwide authorise involuntary hospitalisation and treatment of persons with men...
Current English law has few controls on the involuntary treatment of persons detained under the Ment...
AbstractIntroductionIn the regulation of involuntary treatment, a balance must be found between duti...
The past decade has seen a significant growth in attention to the human rights of persons with disab...
This historically situated, UK-based review of New Labour's human rights and mental health policy fo...
The powers enshrined in mental health legislation go directly to fundamental principles central to a...
A human rights approach to the policing of mental ill-health raises fundamental questions about the ...
A human rights approach to the policing of mental ill-health raises fundamental questions about the ...
AbstractThe use of detention for psychiatric treatment is widespread and sometimes necessary. Intern...
Except for the criminal justice system, the Mental Health Act 1983 (as amended by the MHA 2007) is t...
The use of detention for psychiatric treatment is widespread and sometimes necessary. International ...
Globally, established practice in mental health services has tended to be codified into law in ways ...
This study sought to investigate the barriers to non-medical residential crisis support being develo...
This article considers the role of treatment in the provision of mental health care in England and W...
The reform of the Mental Health Act in 2007 saw the introduction of SupervisedCommunity Treatment Or...
Mental health laws worldwide authorise involuntary hospitalisation and treatment of persons with men...
Current English law has few controls on the involuntary treatment of persons detained under the Ment...
AbstractIntroductionIn the regulation of involuntary treatment, a balance must be found between duti...