List Books » Forced Migration and Mental Health: Rethinking the Care of Refugees and Displaced Persons
Authors: David Ingleby (Editor), David Ingleby
ISBN-13: 9780387226927, ISBN-10: 0387226923
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York, LLC
Date Published: December 2004
Edition: New Edition
David Ingleby is Professor of Intercultural Psychology at Utrecht University. After working for the Medical Research Council in London and teaching in Social and Political Sciences at Cambridge University, he moved to Holland in 1982 to take up a chair in Developmental Psychology. Since 1991 he has concentrated on issues of migration and culture and was awarded his present chair in 1999. Together with Charles Watters he teaches in the European MA network on ‘Migration, Mental Health and Social Care’. He has a lifelong interest in the social dimension of psychology and in interdisciplinary research and practice.
In the last half century, the steadily increasing incidence of armed conflict (both within and between nations) has created mounting numbers of asylum seekers, refugees, and displaced persons. The provision of appropriate mental health services for these individuals has become a major focus of concern, but considerable controversy remains as to what kind of care is necessary. The initial assumptions and models that informed the field have recently come under attack, and alternative approaches have arisen. Forced Migration and Mental Health: Rethinking the Care of Refugees and Displaced Persons provides an up-to-date view of the controversies and future directions for the mental health care of those displaced by war or other extreme conditions.
Building on the themes of cultural appropriateness and an interdisciplinary view of mental health, this book expresses the need to view refugees and others in the context of their own political and existential situations. Rather than imposing Western technological solutions on those from other cultures, it seeks to foster an understanding of the strengths of "indigenous" ways of dealing with hardship and suffering. The contributors to this volume are on the cutting edge of work in refugee mental health and represent a range of disciplines. They have striven to create cohesive chapters that reflect consistent themes as well as their knowledge of each others’ work in chapters that cover such issues as assumptions for intervention, treatment models, social and political concerns, the special needs of women and children, and refugees in host countries.
This book is relevant to all those working with refugees and displaced persons across the mental health disciplines of psychiatry, psychology and social work, as well as to policy makers and students in these areas.
1 | Editor's introduction | 1 |
2 | From trauma to survival and adaptation : towards a framework for guiding mental health initiatives in post-conflict societies | 29 |
3 | Transforming local and global discourses : reassessing the PTSD movement in Bosnia and Croatia | 53 |
4 | Traumatic stress in context : a study of unaccompanied minors from Southern Sudan | 67 |
5 | Meeting the mental health needs of children who have been associated with fighting forces : some lessons from Sierra Leone | 81 |
6 | "My whole body is sick ... my life is not good" : a Rwandan asylum seeker attends a psychiatric clinic in London | 97 |
7 | Mental health care for refugee children in exile | 115 |
8 | Getting closer : methods of research with refugees and asylum seekers | 129 |
9 | Kurdish women refugees : obstacles and opportunities | 149 |
10 | Beyond the personal pain : integrating social and political concerns in therapy with refugees | 169 |
11 | Mental health services in the UK : lessons from transcultural psychiatry | 183 |
12 | Mental health and social care for asylum seekers and refugees : a comparative study | 193 |