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2024, Psychiatric Times
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9 pages
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After a working vacation in Brazil in August, I took time off from my column to restart the academic year and host two friends and family therapists from Mexico City here in Montreal. I have several interviews lined up this fall, including Adalberto Barreto, MD on Integrative Community Therapy (ICT) in Brazil1 and Javier Vicencio, MD on his family therapy center in Mexico City, as well as Andrew McLuhan on the legacy of his grandfather, pioneering Canadian media scholar Marshall McLuhan, and Canadian historian Matthew Smith on the history of community psychiatry.2 Now, I want to set the stage for the questions that these encounters raise for social psychiatry specifically and for the psy disciplines generally.
Social Service Review, 2013
World Social Psychiatry, 2019
Challenges for the field of psychiatry in future are not only technical but also ethical. We need not only more information and more knowledge but also better knowledge. Moreover, above all, knowledge on how to use knowledge. Knowledge is not only information but also it is organized, structured, information, with a social implication or applicability. The differing forms of organizing data and information lead to different rationalities and disciplines. In order to gain insights from different perspectives, a meta-knowledge (knowledge on how to gain and apply knowledge in a prudent way) is needed. This meta-knowledge, which brings together expertise and prudence (Metis or tekhné and phónesis) is what we have come to call bioethics, meaning to imply the dialogical foundation of ethical reflection and use for the sake of a better social environment. [1] Abstract Considerations on the ethical challenges facing social psychiatry are based on the fact that it is an academic and applied endeavor harmonizing different forms of knowledge stemming from diverse sources, with different epistemic traditions. The field requires careful analysis of linguistic uses, distinguishing between public, international, and global health research and practice. Ethical imperatives extend from sound research practices to reasoned application of knowledge, advocacy, and counseling.
Global Mental Health & Psychiatry Newsletter, 2019
Defining Social Psychiatry in the 21st Century: The 23rd World Congress of Social Psychiatry, Bucharest, Romania, October 25-28, 2019 & World Social Psychiatry Vincenzo Di Nicola, MPhil, MD, PhD, FRCPC, DFAPA Founder & President, Canadian Association of Social Psychiatry/ Association canadienne de psychiatrie sociale Chief, Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Montreal University Institute for Mental Health Professor, University of Montreal and The George Washington University To highlight the re-establishment of the Canadian Association of Social Psychiatry this year, I have been invited to present a review article in the inaugural issue of the new psychiatric journal, World Social Psychiatry, to be launched at the World Congress of Social Psychiatry, Bucharest, Romania, October 25-28, 2019. Inspired by a Zulu saying which gets to the heart of the argument, my article is called, “ ‘A Person Is a Person Through Other Persons’: A Social Psychiatry Manifesto for the 21st Century.” A critical issue for our field is how to define contemporary social psychiatry for our times. In my forthcoming article, I address this definitional task by breaking it down into three major questions for social psychiatry and conclude with a call for action, a manifesto for the 21st century social psychiatry: (1) What is social about psychiatry? I address definitional problems that arise, such as binary thinking, and the need for a common language. (2) What are the theory and practice of social psychiatry? Issues include social psychiatry’s core principles, values, and operational criteria; the social determinants of health and the Global Mental Health (GMH) Movement; and the need for translational research. This part of the review establishes the minimal criteria for a coherent theory of social psychiatry and the view of persons that emerges from such a theory, the social self. (3) Why the time has come for a manifesto for social psychiatry. I outline the parameters for a theory of social psychiatry, based on both the social self and the social determinants of health, to offer an inclusive social definition of health, concluding with a call for action, a manifesto for the 21st century social psychiatry. In a parallel activity at the World Congress, an international symposium with the theme of defining social psychiatry in the 21st century will bring together eminent psychiatrists from several continents to address this important task for the field of social psychiatry. Professors Adalberto Barreto from Brazil, BS Chavan from India, Oye Gureje from Nigeria, and Yueqin Huang from China will offer their seminal studies and privileged perspectives to open what we hope will be a lively discussion chaired by President-Elect Rachid Bennegadi from France and myself, President of the Canadian Association of Social Psychiatry. References: Di Nicola V. Family, psychosocial, and cultural determinants of health. In: E Sorel (Ed), 21st Century Global Mental Health. Burlington, MA: Jones & Bartlett Learning, 2012, pp. 119-150. Di Nicola V. “A person is a person through other persons”: A social psychiatry manifesto for the 21st century. World Social Psychiatry 2019;Sept-Dec1(1):1-14.
2011
This book is an examination of our fascination with psychological life and the historical developments that fostered it. Taking Australia as the focal point, Katie Wright traces the ascendancy of therapeutic culture, from nineteenth century concerns about nervousness, to the growth of psychology, the diffusion of an analytic attitude, and the spread of therapy and counselling. Wright's analysis, which draws on social theory, cultural history, and interviews with therapists and people in therapy, calls into question the pessimism that pervades many accounts of the therapeutic turn and provides an alternative assessment of its ramifications for social, political, and personal life in the globalized West. "Wright's work provides an all important antidote to a long series of off-base polemics that misunderstand the role of psychotherapy in contemporary society. Wright's work provides a sharp and welcome contrast. She finds the language of therapy at the heart of the new social movements." -Jeffrey C. Alexander, Lillian Chavenson Saden Professor of Sociology, Yale University "The strength of Wright's work lies in its emphasis on the complex, contradictory ways in which various aspects of our global worlds enter into the inner, emotional texture of identity as well as the processes through which the unconscious imagination constitutes fabrications of the social-historical world." -Anthony Elliott, Chair of Sociology, Flinders University, Australia. "This work makes an important contribution to cultural and historical sociology. Wright argues convincingly for a reappraisal of therapeutic culture through a compelling critique of existing theory and by drawing on alternative traditions to those that have dominated scholarship in this field. The case studies she presents are intrinsically interesting and theoretically important, and her innovative perspective on the therapeutic society will make a valuable and significant contribution to the field." -Zlatko Skrbis, Dean, UQ Graduate School, The University of Queensland, Australia.
Social Science & Medicine, 1986
A market for family therapy workshops has mushroomed in recent years. Treatment of families by therapists conducting such workshops, however, can be dispassionate and dehumanizing. Using the distinction between curing and healing, I do not question the curative potential of family therapy, but I question whether this kind of doctor/patient interaction promotes healing. Also, by demonstrating how the systems model tends to objectify patients and alienate therapists from those they treat, this paper challenges claims that family therapy recognizes the social nature of illness. The dehumanizing treatment cannot be attributed solely to the therapists, but requires further interpretation by analyzing the biases of the therapy model, the commodified context of the workshops, and epistemological issues arising from the application of general systems theory to a social model of treatment. Family systems therapy shares epistemological features with biomedicine, and like the biomedical model, alienates therapists from patients. This alienation, ironically, can be even greater when the family systems model is used than in biomedical treatment. Finally, I suggest that family therapy workshops have grown in popularity because the mechanistic features of the treatment model, drawn largely from cybernetics, promote the production and reproduction of a form of therapy compatible with the emphasis on 'functional health' favored in an advanced capitalist society.
Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry
Depression and Anxiety, 2002
This is the seminar proposal for the Culture, Brain and Mind Program at McGill University's Division of Social and Transcultural Psychiatry The question I am asking is: does social and transcultural psychiatry (and psychiatry generally) have a political agenda today? Should it? Why and why not are explored by looking at Giorgio Agamben's investigation of the separation since Aristotle between private (home) and public life, the biological and the political, with disastrous consequences. Foucault first introduced the notion of biopolitics which Agamben has elaborated in a his chef d'ouevre, Homo Sacer. I examine the implications of this for an engagement of psychiatry with politics, calling along with Agamben and others for a new politics of "potenza" (potentiality) and a new psychiatry of potenza. This is the opening of a new line of inquiry I have started in my seminar on psychiatry and the humanities at the University of Montreal, at McGill's Culture, Brain and Mind program, and with the Society for the Study of Psychiatry and Culture where we will have a debate on this topic in April 2019.
En el corazón de la Algarbía. Un estudio arqueológico de la Sierra de Gibralmora (Pizarra, Málaga). Necrópolis prehistórica de Luna y poblado altomedieval de Castillejos de Quintana / Santa María de Bobastro, 2024
escrituras americanas 6 (1/2), 2024
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