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Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Preface: background and overview
Acknowledgements
About the authors
List of abbreviations
Over view of Chapter
1 Introduction
Section 1: First-person accounts in relation to recovery
2 Life beyond psychiatry
3 A wellness approach to mental health recovery
4 Families and patients with mental illness: on the recovery road
Section 2: Historical, epistemological, and metaphysical aspects of recovery of people with mental illness
5 Benevolence and discipline: the concept of recovery in early nineteenth-century moral treatment
6 The epistemological basis of personal recovery
7 Contrasting conceptualizations of recovery imply a distinct research methodology
8 Cultural contexts and constructions of recovery
9 Recovery and hope in relation to schizophrenia
10 Recovery, narrative theory, and generative madness
11 From being subjected to being a subject: recovery in relation to schizophrenia
Section 3: Justice and other ethical aspects of recovery of people with mental illness
12 Some social science antinomies and their implications for the recovery-oriented approach to mental illness and psychiatric rehabilitation
13 Recovery and the partitioning of scientific authority in psychiatry
14 Being ill and getting better: recovery and accounts of disorder
15 Is recovery a model?
16 Considering recovery as a process: or, life is not an outcome
17 Recovery and stigma: issues of social justice
18 Recovery and advocacy: contextualizing justice in relation to recovery from mental illness in East Asia
19 Ethical and related practical issues faced by recovery-oriented mental healthcare providers: a risk-benefit analysis
Index
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