Genealogies and Anthropologies of Global Mental Health.

Journal: Culture, medicine and psychiatry

Volume: 43

Issue: 4

Year of Publication: 2020

Affiliated Institutions:  Inserm and Cermes (Research Center for Medicine, Health, Mental Health and Society - UMR ), Villejuif, France. anne.lovell@parisdescartes.fr. Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, King's College London, London, UK. Department of Anthropology, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.

Abstract summary 

Within the proliferation of studies identified with global mental health, anthropologists rarely take global mental health itself as their object of inquiry. The papers in this special issue were selected specifically to problematize global mental health. To contextualize them, this introduction critically weighs three possible genealogies through which the emergence of global health can be explored: (1) as a divergent thread in the qualitative turn of global health away from earlier international health and development; (2) as the product of networks and social movements; and (3) as a diagnostically- and metrics-driven psychiatric imperialism, reinforced by pharmaceutical markets. Each paper tackles a different component of the assemblage of global mental health: knowledge production and circulation, global mental health principles enacted in situ, and subaltern modalities of healing through which global mental health can be questioned. Pluralizing anthropology, the articles include research sites in meeting rooms, universities, research laboratories, clinics, healers and health screening camps, households, and the public spaces of everyday life, in India, Ghana, Brazil, Senegal, South Africa, Kosovo and Palestine, as well as in US and European institutions that constitute nodes in the global network through which scientific knowledge and certain models of mental health circulate.

Authors & Co-authors:  Lovell Anne M AM Read Ursula M UM Lang Claudia C

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  Afr J Psychiatry (Johannesbg). 2013 May;16(3):187-95
Authors :  3
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1007/s11013-019-09660-7
SSN : 1573-076X
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Anthropology
Other Terms
Critique of psychiatry;Genealogies;Global South;Global mental health;Human rights;Social movements
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Qualitative
Country of Study
Senegal
Publication Country
Netherlands