VOL 5, NO 3 (2016)
INTERSECTIONALITIES
A Global Journal of Social Work Analysis, Research, Polity, and Practice
Special Issue: Mad Studies: Intersections with Disability Studies, Social Work, and ‘Mental Health’
INTRODUCTION
| Editorial: Destination Mad Studies | |
| Brenda A. LeFrançois, Peter Beresford, Jasna Russo | 1–10 |
ARTICLES
| Doing Mad Studies: Making (Non)sense Together | |
| Richard A. Ingram | 11–17 |
| An Introduction to Anti-Black Sanism | |
| Sonia Meerai, Idil Abdillahi, Jennifer Poole | 18–35 |
| Why Mad Studies Needs Survivor Research and Survivor Research Needs Mad Studies | |
| Angela Sweeney | 36–61 |
| Recovery-as-Policy as a Form of Neoliberal State Making | |
| Brigit McWade | 62–81 |
| “About Nothing Without Us”: A Comparative Analysis of Autonomous Organizing Among People Who Use Drugs and Psychiatrized Groups in Canada | |
| Christopher B. R. Smith | 82–109 |
| Too Young to Be Mad: Disabling Encounters with ‘Normal’ from the Perspectives of Psychiatrized Youth | |
| Maria Liegghio | 110–129 |
| Relocating Mad_Trans Re_presentations Within an Intersectional Framework | |
| Eliah Hannes Lüthi | 130–150 |
| A Desire to be ‘Normal’? A Discursive and Intersectional Analysis of ‘Penetration Disorder’ | |
| Jemma Tosh, Krista Carson | 151–172 |
| Racialized Communities, Producing Madness and Dangerousness | |
| Frank Keating | 173–185 |
| Psy-Times: The Psycho-Politics of Resilience in University Student Life | |
| Katie Aubrecht | 186–200 |
source: http://journals.library.mun.ca/ojs/index.php/IJ/issue/current


![HOSPITALISATION PSYCHIATRIQUE [lucie_ptit_lu]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fadmin.commedesfous.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2026%2F01%2Fhospitalisationpsychiatrique.webp&w=1920&q=75)

