Selected works by meeting participants

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Selected works by meeting participants
Mad-Positive in the Academy: An International Dialogue on Practice
May 18 - 20, 2012
School of Disability Studies, Ryerson University
From Scotland:
Consultation and Advocacy Promotion Service. (2010). Oor Mad History: A Community History
of the Lothian Mental Health Service User Movement. Edinburgh: CAPS.
O’Donnell, A. (2010). Oor Mad History: Community history as a way of revitalising mental health
collective advocacy. In A. Emejulu and M. Shaw’s (Eds.) Community Empowerment:
Critical Perspectives from Scotland. The Glasgow Papers. Edinburgh: Community
Development Journal. pp. 40-45.
Oor Mad History Blog: http://oormadhistory.blogspot.ca/
Parkes, T. (2009, November 17). Process in the life-world or progression through the institution?
How nursing academic careers weave personal knowledge and discontinuous narratives
into conversations of multiple identities. CETL Paper contribution.
Tilley, S. Plotting the Story of Recovery in Edinburgh and Scotland. National Programme for
Improving Mental Health and Well-Being: Small Research Projects Initiative, 2005-2006.
ISBN 978-0-7559-5756-9.
Tilley, S. & Cowan, S. (2011). Recovery in mental health policy: good strategy or bad rhetoric?
Critical Public Health, 21(1), 95-104.
From England:
Cresswell, M. & Spandler, H. (2009). Psychopolitics: Peter Sedgwick’s legacy for the politics of
mental health. Social Theory & Health, 7(2), 129-147.
Cresswell, M. & Spandler, H. (2013). The Engaged Academic: Academic intellectuals and the
psychiatric survivor movement. Social Movement Studies, 12(2), 138-154.
Downe, S., McKeown, M., Johnson, E., Comensus Community Involvement Team, Comensus
Advisory Group, Koloczek, L., Grunwald, A. & Malihi-Shoja, L. (2007). The UCLan
community engagement and service user support (Comensus) project: valuing
authenticity, making space for emergence. Health Expectations, 10, 392-406.
McKeown, M. (2012). Alliances and communicative action: one possibility for reframing theory
and praxis. In J. Anderson, B. Sapey and H. Spandler (Eds),Distress or Disability?
Proceedings of a symposium held at Lancaster University, 15-16 November 2011. Pp.
71-75.
McKeown, M. (2009). Alliances in action: Opportunities and threats to solidarity between
workers and service users in health and social care disputes. Social Theory & Health,
7(2), 148-169.
Spandler, H. & Calton, T. (2009). Psychosis and Human Rights: Conflicts in Mental Health
Policy and Practice. Social Policy & Society, 8(2), 245-256.
From the U.S.A.:
Hopper, K. & Lincoln, A. (2009). Participation in Public Mental Health Research: A Conceptual
Framework and Report from Practice. In J. Wallcraft, B. Shrank & M. Amering’s
Handbook of Service User Involvement in Mental Health Research. John Wiley & Sons,
Ltd.
Morrison, L. (2006). A Matter of Definition: Acknowledging Consumer/Survivor Experiences
through Narrative. Radical Psychology, 5.
Morrison, L. (2011). To Recognize the Person: Learning from Narratives of Psychiatric
Treatment. Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics,1(1), 35–42.
Rowe, M., Clayton, A., Benedict, P., Bellamy, C., Antunes, K., Miller, R., Pelletier, J., Stern, E. &
O’Connell, M. J. (2012). Going to the Source: Creating a Citizenship Outcome Measure
by Community-Based Participatory Research Methods. Psychiatric Services, 63(5), 445450.
Rowe, M. & Pelletier, J.F. (2012). Citizenship: A Response to the Marginalization of People with
Mental Illnesses. Journal of Forensic Psychology Practice, 12(4), 366-381.
From Canada:
Church, K. (1996). Beyond “bad manners”: The power relations of “consumer participations” in
Ontario’s community mental health system. Canadian Journal of Community Mental
Health, 15(12), 27-44.
Church, K. (2006). Working like crazy on Working Like Crazy: Imag(in)ing CED practice through
documentary film. In Shragge, E. (Ed.) Community Economic Development: Building for
Social Change. Sydney: University College of Cape Breton.
Church, K. (2013). Making Madness Matter in Academic Practice. In B. A. LeFrancois, R.
Menzies and G. Reaume’s (eds.) Mad matters: A critical reader in Canadian Mad
Studies. Toronto, ON: Canadian Scholar’s Press Inc. pp. 181-190.
Costa, L., Voronka, J., Landry, D., Reid, J., Mcfarlane, B., Reville, D., & Church, K. (2012).
“Recovering our Stories”: A Small Act of Resistance. Studies in Social Justice, 6(1), 85101.
Daley, A., Costa, L., & Ross, L. E. (2012). (W)righting women: constructions of gender, sexuality
and race in the psychiatric chart. Culture, Health & Sexuality: An International Journal for
Research, Intervention and Care, 14(8), 955-969.
Mental Health "Recovery" Study Working Group (2009). Mental Health "Recovery": Users and
Refusers. Toronto: Wellesley Institute.
Mykhalovskiy, E. & Church, K. (2006). Of T-shirts and Ontologies: Celebrating George Smith’s
pedagogical legacies. In Frampton, C. Kinsman, G., Thompson, A. and Tilleczek, K.
(Eds.) Sociology for Changing the World. Toronto: Fernwood.
Poole, J. M. & Ward, J. (2013). ‘Breaking open the bone’: Storying, Sanism and Mad Grief. In B.
A. LeFrancois, R. Menzies and G. Reaume’s (eds.) Mad matters: A critical reader in
Canadian Mad Studies. Toronto, ON: Canadian Scholar’s Press Inc. pp. 94-104.
Poole, J. M., Jivraj, T., Arslanian, A., Bellows, K., Chiasson, S., Hakimy, H., Passini, J. & Reid,
J. (2012). Sanism, ‘Mental Health’ and Social Work/Education: A Review and Call to
Action. Intersectionalities: A Global Journal of Social Work Analysis, Research, Polity
and Practice, 1(1), 20-36.
Reid, J. (2010). Conversations with mad students: experiences of undergraduate education in a
supposed anti-oppressive social work program.
Reville, D. (1981). Don’t Spyhole Me. Pheonix Rising, 2(1). Pp.18 – 41.
Reville, D. (2013). Is Mad Studies Emerging as a New Field of Inquiry? In B. A. LeFrancois, R.
Menzies and G. Reaume’s (eds.) Mad matters: A critical reader in Canadian Mad
Studies. Toronto, ON: Canadian Scholar’s Press Inc. pp.170-180.
Reville, D., & Church, K. (2012). Mad activism enters its fifth decade: Psychiatric survivor
organizing in Toronto. In A. Choudry, J. Hanley and E. Shragge’s (eds.) Organize!:
Building from the Local for Global Justice. pp.189-201.
Voronka, J. (2008). Making Bipolar Britney: Proliferating psychiatric diagnoses through tabloid
Media. Radical Psychology,7(2).
Voronka, J. (2008). Re/moving Forward?: Spacing Mad Degeneracy at the Queen Street Site.
Resources for Feminist Research, 33(1&2), 45-61.
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