![]() Hospital or community living? Examining consumer perspectives on deinstitutionalization. A., Godleski, L., Rakfeldt, J., & Griffith, E. International Journal of Culture and Mental Health, 10(3), 229–237.ĭavidson, L., Hoge, M. Definitions of social inclusion and social exclusion: The invisibility of mental illness and the social conditions of participation. Wellington: Mental Health Commission.ĭavey, S., & Gordon, S. Mental health and social inclusion concepts and measurements: Occasional paper. Social Policy & Administration, 41, 289–312.Ĭuthbert, S. Challenges in multidisciplinary systematic reviewing: A study on social exclusion and mental health policy. Ĭurran, C., Burchardt, T., Knapp, M., McDaid, D., & Li, B. 1 Article 12: Equal recognition before the law. ![]() Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 20(6), 514–524.Ĭommittee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Co-producing social inclusion: The structure/agency conundrum. Social Policy and Administration, 33(3), 227–244.Ĭlifton, A., Repper, J., Banks, D., & Remnant, J. Oxford: Blackwell.īurchardt, T., Le Grand, J., & Piachaud, D. Davies (Ed.), The Blackwell encyclopaedia of social work (pp. Mental health nurses, promoters of inclusion or perpetuators of exclusion? Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 12(4), 387–395.īurchardt, T. What does social inclusion mean? Mental Health and Social Inclusion, 12(2), 24.īertram, G., & Stickley, T. ![]() International Journal of Epidemiology, 43(2), 354–364.īertram, M. Measuring social inclusion – A key outcome in global mental health. Social inclusion: A framework for evaluation. Synergia Ltd: Ponsonby, Auckland.īates, P. Finally, the implications and some suggested future focused approaches and responses to these pressing social issues are discussed. The current chapter explores the current evidence base on these issues, drawing on a limited collection of studies that attend directly to the perspectives of PWMD for the purpose of further development of definitions. In the case of PWMD, there are likely to be a complex array of factors that feed into such experiences, to be encapsulated in definitions. In any case, it is likely to be important to ground the definitions in the experiences of those people who experience exclusion and inclusion. A number of approaches have been taken to arrive at definitions, including a focus on rights, or participation (or both), a focus on complex social systems, a focus on subjectivity, objectivity (or both). Similarly, there are no established definitions specifically based on the perspectives of people with mental distress (PWMD) themselves. Indeed, to date, no consensus has been reached on the meaning of either concept. The concepts of social exclusion and social inclusion are notoriously difficult to define.
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