User:Daask/sandbox/Mental health and civil rights
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The civil rights movement set the cultural values and tone of the era, and strongly influenced the movement for the rights of the insane.[1] Also, this connection was and continues to be made as a framing strategy for mental health consumer advocates.[2]
Ways to consider this relationship:
- The civil rights movement was a major influence on the cultural milieu and ideology, which was then adopted by the consumer rights movement.
- The civil rights movement was an example of social change methods which were used by the consumer rights movement.
- The civil rights movement is brought in as a comparison by the consumer rights movement as a framing strategy, similar to how it is used by LGBT groups [2]
References
[edit]- ^ Kliewer, Stephen P.; McNally, Melissa; Trippany, Robyn L. "Deinstitutionalization: Its Impact on Community Mental Health Centers and the Seriously Mentally Ill" (PDF). Alabama Counseling Association Journal. 35 (1). Retrieved 14 January 2017.
- ^ a b eg. National Council on Disability (October 23, 2012), Deinstitutionalization: Unfinished Business, Washington, DC: Author, retrieved 14 January 2017
External links
[edit]- Deinstitutionalisation#Shift to community-based care
- Millen Brand
- Psychiatric survivors movement
- Critical Psychiatry Network#Anti-psychiatry and Critical Psychiatry