Anthropologists studying mental healthcare tend to do so through observational and analytic attention to how individuals experience specific clinical and cultural contexts. While narrating lived experience may serve to humanise conditions like mental illness, those of us observing from a White, colonist-descended position can overlook the structural and racialised forces that determine entrance into particular treatment spaces. In doing so, we inadvertently obscure structural racism. This Position Piece critiques my approach as a student-in-training in anthropology, who conducted an ethnography of outpatient, government-funded clozapine clinics in the United Kingdom and Australia. In documenting how these clinics unexpectedly became a centr...
In what ways do two bodies of knowledge meet? Anthropology and psychiatry most often meet in a mood ...
© 2016, Springer Science+Business Media New York. In the past decade anthropologists working the bou...
Mad stories, particularly in the context of biomedical institutions beyond the West, have rarely bee...
Anthropologists studying mental healthcare tend to do so through observational and analytic attentio...
Ethnography often entails being a vulnerable observer (Behar, 1996). There is nothing more heartbre...
It has been consistently reported that the African-Caribbean population in the UK are more likely th...
The position presented in this article draws on the professional insights of the authors, reflecting...
This dissertation is an ethnographic case study of inequity and injustice in U.S. higher education b...
International audienceWhen ethnographers explore ‘particularly sensitive’ social activities, raising...
Drawing on the personal stories of people of colour who have been in contact with psychiatric spaces...
In this paper, I analyze the illness stories narrated by a mother and her 13-year-old son as part of...
BACKGROUND: Evidence regarding the presence and persistence of ethnic inequalities in mental healthc...
Background There is strong evidence of inequalities in mental healthcare access, experiences and ou...
INTRODUCTION: Cultural Consultation is a clinical process that emerged from anthropological critique...
Identifying how the many elements of structural racism affect racial and ethnic health inequities re...
In what ways do two bodies of knowledge meet? Anthropology and psychiatry most often meet in a mood ...
© 2016, Springer Science+Business Media New York. In the past decade anthropologists working the bou...
Mad stories, particularly in the context of biomedical institutions beyond the West, have rarely bee...
Anthropologists studying mental healthcare tend to do so through observational and analytic attentio...
Ethnography often entails being a vulnerable observer (Behar, 1996). There is nothing more heartbre...
It has been consistently reported that the African-Caribbean population in the UK are more likely th...
The position presented in this article draws on the professional insights of the authors, reflecting...
This dissertation is an ethnographic case study of inequity and injustice in U.S. higher education b...
International audienceWhen ethnographers explore ‘particularly sensitive’ social activities, raising...
Drawing on the personal stories of people of colour who have been in contact with psychiatric spaces...
In this paper, I analyze the illness stories narrated by a mother and her 13-year-old son as part of...
BACKGROUND: Evidence regarding the presence and persistence of ethnic inequalities in mental healthc...
Background There is strong evidence of inequalities in mental healthcare access, experiences and ou...
INTRODUCTION: Cultural Consultation is a clinical process that emerged from anthropological critique...
Identifying how the many elements of structural racism affect racial and ethnic health inequities re...
In what ways do two bodies of knowledge meet? Anthropology and psychiatry most often meet in a mood ...
© 2016, Springer Science+Business Media New York. In the past decade anthropologists working the bou...
Mad stories, particularly in the context of biomedical institutions beyond the West, have rarely bee...