International audienceThis chapter examines the emergence and rise of a rhetoric of revolutionary change in western Psychiatry from the postwar period to the 2000s. It traces the roots of this rhetoric in the transformations of psychiatry and society in the immediate postwar period and examines the development of competing vision of revolutions in diverse segments of psychiatry in subsequent years. The chapter also offers a survey of the historiography of biological treatments and deinstitutionalization in the second half of twentieth century
This chapter is a brief survey of the various transformations that have occurred over the past 200 (...
Objective: The authors evaluate the forces that are changing psychiatric practice and pro-pose optio...
This is a chapter from an edited volume, published by Palgrave Macmillan: Memory, Anniversaries and ...
International audienceThis chapter examines the emergence and rise of a rhetoric of revolutionary ch...
During the late 1960s psychiatry in the United States began to replicate the unrest in society at la...
International audienceThis article develops an analytical framework of processes of institutional re...
International audienceThis article explores the transformations in the regime of practice and discou...
When “antipsychotic ” drugs were introduced into psychiatry in the 1950s, they were thought to work ...
2016-07-24This study examines the rhetorical features of psychiatric nosological controversy. The lo...
This article offers a transnational account of the historical origins and development of the concept...
Our everyday lives are increasingly intertwined with psychiatry and discussions of mental health. Ye...
Between 1955 and 1985 the United States reduced the population confined in its public mental hospita...
The history of psychiatry has over the past decades been largely dominated by the production and re-...
Do histories of psychiatry make a difference--or have legal implications--in the present? Does our c...
Recovery is a conceptual model that underpins New Zealand’s mental health service delivery in the 21...
This chapter is a brief survey of the various transformations that have occurred over the past 200 (...
Objective: The authors evaluate the forces that are changing psychiatric practice and pro-pose optio...
This is a chapter from an edited volume, published by Palgrave Macmillan: Memory, Anniversaries and ...
International audienceThis chapter examines the emergence and rise of a rhetoric of revolutionary ch...
During the late 1960s psychiatry in the United States began to replicate the unrest in society at la...
International audienceThis article develops an analytical framework of processes of institutional re...
International audienceThis article explores the transformations in the regime of practice and discou...
When “antipsychotic ” drugs were introduced into psychiatry in the 1950s, they were thought to work ...
2016-07-24This study examines the rhetorical features of psychiatric nosological controversy. The lo...
This article offers a transnational account of the historical origins and development of the concept...
Our everyday lives are increasingly intertwined with psychiatry and discussions of mental health. Ye...
Between 1955 and 1985 the United States reduced the population confined in its public mental hospita...
The history of psychiatry has over the past decades been largely dominated by the production and re-...
Do histories of psychiatry make a difference--or have legal implications--in the present? Does our c...
Recovery is a conceptual model that underpins New Zealand’s mental health service delivery in the 21...
This chapter is a brief survey of the various transformations that have occurred over the past 200 (...
Objective: The authors evaluate the forces that are changing psychiatric practice and pro-pose optio...
This is a chapter from an edited volume, published by Palgrave Macmillan: Memory, Anniversaries and ...