Social Movements and Sociological Knowledge on Mental Health

Event Details

Social Movements and Sociological Knowledge on Mental Health

Time: June 13, 2014 from 11:30am to 4:30pm
Location: University of Wolverhampton, City Campus
City/Town: Wolverhampton
Website or Map: http://www.wlv.ac.uk/default.…
Phone: Lydia Lewis at Lydia.lewis@wlv.ac.uk or 01902 32 3251.
Event Type: symposium
Organized By: BSA sociology of mental health study group
Latest Activity: Apr 15, 2014

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Event Description

The British Sociological Association’s Sociology of Mental Health Study Group is 10 years old this year. Its programme of work has included exploration of links between academic sociology and social movements in mental health and between the women’s and mental health sectors.[KP1]  This symposium seeks to build on this programme to explore the contributions of a range of social movements to sociological knowledge on mental health and the relationships between these movements. The event will provide a space for critical reflection and discussion on:

  • the ways in which the psychiatric survivor movement, the disabled people’s (disability) movement, the trade union movement and the women’s (feminist) movement and their social histories have shaped sociological knowledge on mental health;
  • overlaps, links, commonalities and synergies, as well as differences, points of departure and tensions between these movements; and
  • the possibilities or otherwise for alliances between these social movements and between the movements and academia in sociological knowledge construction and social action for the future concerning mental health.

The event will offer space for multi-disciplinary debate and discussion of the interface between disciplinary/study/practice areas concerned with social perspectives on mental health (e.g. Medical Sociology, Education, Disability Studies, Women’s Studies, Critical Psychology, Social Psychiatry; Nursing; Social Work, Community Development) and provide the opportunity for coalescing sociological knowledge on mental health from a range of study and practice areas. 

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