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September 11, 2020
Inflection Point: Open Dialogue in Hospital Emergency and Inpatient Settings
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September 14, 2020
https://www.facebook.com/events/2699722200240535/?ref=110
Public online event hosted by Institute for the Development of Human Arts
Decarcerating Care: Taking Policing Out of Mental Health Crisis Response
N/A
September 16, 2020
Special Live Six-Hour Online Training Program
Approved for 6 CEs
Begins Wednesday, September 16, 2020
A Therapist’s Path for Exploring Implicit Bias and Racial Trauma
N/A
September 18, 2020
14 hours of talks-poetry-interviews-presentations-videos-drama-panel- music etc All challenging the pathologising of emotional distress.
Dip in and out at your leisure. Most of it will be recorded so you can watch at a later date.
Pay what you want.
This is a fundraising event with a minimum fee of £1 to maximise accessibility. Please make a donation based on what you can afford. After covering tech costs funds will go towards AD4E's future events, enabling us to offer more low cost or free places for people who can’t afford to pay.
Confirmed contributors:
Dr Lucy Johnstone, Indigo Daya, Dr Akima Thomas, Prof Emmy van Deurzen, Dr Gabor Maté, Ruth Dixon, Paula J Caplan PhD, Pat McArdle, Bob Whitaker, Johann Hari, Mica Gray, Dr Karen Treisman, Michelle Benjamin, Prof Peter Kinderman, Sanah Ahsan, Stevie Lewis, Laura Delano, Dr Joanne Cacciatore, Dr James Davies, Matt Ball, Prof John Read, Sally-Ann, Viv Gordon, James & The Disorders, Lydia Daisy, Jo Watson
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September 24, 2020
by London Learning Cooperative
Mental Health Workers’ Inquiry (MHWI) are a new group of workers organising in and beyond the mental health services sector. Together, we aim to increase our understanding of the nature of work and ownership, as well as to explore clinical approaches that foreground anti-capitalism and anti-imperialism. Our primary purpose is to develop ways of marrying member-led trade union organising with innovative financial vehicles to transform our current workplaces from within. In addition to creating new institutions, we propose radically to re-imagine those that already exist.
This discussion will focus on the relationship between race, imperialism and psychotherapy, exploring both the oppressive legacy of the clinic and how its contradictions can lead to a transformative and liberatory practice.