Ausgabe 3/2024
Special Issue: Theorizing the “social” in mental health research and action
Inhalt (17 Artikel)
Theorising the social in mental health research and action: a call for more inclusivity and accountability
Dörte Bemme, Dominique Béhague
The struggle for the social: rejecting the false separation of 'social' worlds in mental health spaces
Rochelle A. Burgess
A quantitative approach to the intersectional study of mental health inequalities during the COVID-19 pandemic in UK young adults
Darío Moreno-Agostino, Charlotte Woodhead, George B. Ploubidis, Jayati Das-Munshi
Social pathways to care: how community-based network ties shape the health care response of individuals with mental health problems
Harold D. Green Jr., Bernice A. Pescosolido
Who has mental health problems? Comparing individual, social and psychiatric constructions of mental health
Bernice A. Pescosolido, Harold D. Green Jr.
Conceptualising the social in mental health and work capability: implications of medicalised framing in the UK welfare system
Annie Irvine, Tianne Haggar
Making un/equal: reassessing inequality and mental health through a praxeographic approach on welfare categorization processes
Milena D. Bister
Opening up the ‘black-box’: what strategies do community mental health workers use to address the social dimensions of mental health?
Sumeet Jain, Pooja Pillai, Kaaren Mathias
The ambiguities of social inclusion in mental health: learning from lived experience of serious mental illness in Ghana and the occupied Palestinian territory
Ursula M. Read, Hanna Kienzler, Suzan Mitwalli, Yoke Rabaia, Lionel Sakyi, Annabella Osei-Tutu
The politicizing clinic: insights on ‘the social’ for mental health policy and practice
Dominique P. Béhague, Helen Gonçalves, Suélen Henriques da Cruz, Larissa de Cruz, Bernardo L. Horta, Natália P. Lima
How to think about the social in psychiatric research? On language games and styles of social thought
Rasmus Birk, Nick Manning
Mutuality as a method: advancing a social paradigm for global mental health through mutual learning
Dörte Bemme, Tessa Roberts, Kenneth A. Ae-Ngibise, Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda, Kaustubh Joag, Ashraf Kagee, Mercilene Machisa, Claire van der Westhuizen, André van Rensburg, Samantha Willan, Milena Wuerth, May Aoun, Sumeet Jain, Crick Lund, Kaaren Mathias, Ursula Read, Tatiana Taylor Salisbury, Rochelle A. Burgess
Social network structure as a suicide prevention target
Ian Cero, Munmun De Choudhury, Peter A. Wyman
The importance of social context in explaining the relationship between later-life work transitions and mental well-being
Karen Glaser, Ludovico Carrino, Ginevra Floridi