Listing 1 - 10 of 125 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
eebo-0055
Insane --- Mentally ill --- Commitment and detention --- Care
Choose an application
Choose an application
Mentally ill --- Commitment and detention --- Winterwerp, Frits
Choose an application
A courageous female journalist’s classic exposé of the horrific treatment of the mentally ill in nineteenth-century America In 1887, Nellie Bly accepted an assignment from publisher Joseph Pulitzer of the New York World and went undercover at the lunatic asylum on Blackwell Island, America’s first municipal mental hospital. Calling herself “Nellie Brown,” she was able to convince policemen, a judge, and a series of doctors of her madness with a few well-practiced facial expressions of derangement. At the institution, Bly discovered the stuff of nightmares. Mentally ill patients were fed rotten, inedible food; violently abused by a brutal, uncaring staff; and misdiagnosed, mistreated, or generally ignored by the doctors and so-called mental health experts entrusted with their care. To her horror, Bly encountered sane patients who had been committed on the barest of pretenses and came to the shocking realization that, while the Blackwell Island asylum was remarkably easy to get into, it was nearly impossible to leave. This ebook has been professionally proofread to ensure accuracy and readability on all devices.
Psychiatric hospitals --- Mentally ill --- Commitment and detention.
Choose an application
Mental health laws --- Mentally ill --- Commitment and detention
Choose an application
A powerful, sophisticated, and original critique on how the disciplines of law and psychiatry behave and on how the mental health and justice systems operate, Punishing the Mentally Ill reveals where, how, and why the identity and humanity of persons with psychiatric disorders are consciously and unconsciously denied. Author Bruce A. Arrigo contends that despite periodic and well-intentioned efforts at reform, the current law-psychiatry system functions to punish the mentally ill for being different. The book synthesizes a wide range of mainstream and critical literature in sociology, law, philosophy, history, psychology, and psychoanalysis to establish a new theory of punishment at the law-psychiatry divide. To situate the analysis, enduring psycholegal issues are explored including the meaning of mental illness, definitions and predictions of dangerousness, the ethics of advocacy, the right to community-based treatment, the logic of forensic courtroom verdicts, transcarceration, and the execution of mentally disordered offenders among others. Punishing the Mentally Ill shows that current mental disability law research, programming, and policy are seriously flawed and that wholesale reform is necessary if the goals of citizen justice, social well-being, and humanism are to be realized.
Insanity (Law) --- Mentally ill --- Punishment --- Commitment and detention
Choose an application
Punishment --- Correctional institutions --- Mentally ill --- History --- Commitment and detention
Choose an application
Mental health laws --- Mentally ill --- Commitment and detention
Choose an application
Mentally ill --- Mental health laws --- Commitment and detention
Choose an application
Mentally ill offenders --- Mentally ill --- Punishment --- Commitment and detention
Listing 1 - 10 of 125 | << page >> |
Sort by
|