CALENDAR OF EVENTS

A curated listing of international critical psychology conferences and events. Email us at [email protected] if you’d like to suggest an event.

Events in January 2025

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December 30, 2024
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January 27, 2025(1 event)

Introducing the Mad Studies Reader


January 27, 2025

“Mad Studies” is an emerging interdisciplinary collaboration for transforming how we approach mental health and wellbeing. Mad studies centers the perspective of lived experience and it brings together activists, artists, concerned clinicians, and critical disability scholars. It uses these differing perspectives to liberate us from rigid categories, from single vision framings, and from the sanist prejudice. Mad studies, at its heart, realigns who gets to contribute to the conversation, research, and practice around mental difference.

This panel, moderated by Neil Gong, brings together the three editors of the recently released Mad Studies Reader, Jazmine Russell, Alisha Ali, and Bradley Lewis, to celebrate and nurture this emergent work and the community it fosters.

This event is co-sponsored by NYU Center for Disability Studies.

Please note that zoom link will be sent 24 hours before the event.

Panelists

Alisha Ali: Alisha is an Associate Professor in the Department of Applied Psychology at New York University where she heads the Advocacy and Community-Based Trauma Studies (ACTS) Lab. Her research examines the mental health effects of various forms of oppression.

Jazmine Russell: Jazmine is the co-founder of the Institute for the Development of Human Arts, a transformative mental health educator, trauma survivor, and host of Depth Work: A Holistic Mental Health Podcast. She is an interdisciplinary scholar of Mad Studies, Critical Psychology, and Neuroscience, and a postgraduate student at the Berlin School of Mind and Brain.

Bradley Lewis: Brad is a psychotherapist/psychiatrist and a humanities professor at New York University. He is devoted to enriching everyday life and clinical practice through integration with the arts, humanities, and cultural/political/religious study.

Neil Gong: Neil is an assistant professor of sociology at UC San Diego, where he researches psychiatric services, homelessness, and how communities seek to maintain social order. His recent book, Sons, Daughters, and Sidewalk Psychotics, examines inequality in mental health care by comparing public safety net and elite private psychiatric programs.
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New York University and Gallatin provide accommodations to people living with disabilities who wish to attend events at the School, whether in person or virtually. To request accommodations, or should you have questions regarding accessibility for an event, please contact Gallatin’s Office of Special Events by emailing [email protected] no later than two weeks prior to the event. 


Gallatin reserves the right to capture and use images (including video, photo, audio) of participants at this event in its current or future marketing materials. These materials include but are not limited to: social media, digital and/or print posters, email and web-based materials. By attending and participating in this event, you are consenting to having your image captured for these purposes. If you have concerns about your likeness being used, please reach out to [email protected] and we will accommodate your request.

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January 28, 2025
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