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Shadows of Reform. Investigating Unintended Consequences of Mental Health Reform
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- Nombre de pages232
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-40899-3
- EAN9783565408993
- Date de parution14/04/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille2 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
When reformers dismantled the great psychiatric institutions of the twentieth century, they believed they were liberating the suffering. They were not entirely wrong. The asylums had housed darkness - overcrowding, abuse, the quiet erasure of human dignity. But what followed was not the promised age of community healing. It was something far more complicated, and far more haunting.
Between the 1950s and the 1980s, the number of people with serious mental illness living in psychiatric institutions dropped from nearly half a million to roughly fifty thousand.
Community health centers that were meant to absorb the displaced were often never built. The mentally ill drifted - onto streets, into jails, into the margins of cities ill-equipped to receive them. Jails and prisons became, by default, the new asylums. Shadows of Reform traces the historical arc of this transformation: from Dorothea Dix's nineteenth-century crusade to build humane institutions, through the pharmacological optimism of chlorpromazine and Thorazine, through the landmark Community Mental Health Act of 1963, and into the cascading failures that followed.
It examines how well-intentioned legal reforms - rewriting civil commitment standards, curtailing involuntary treatment - collided with underfunded systems and tough-on-crime politics to produce outcomes no reformer had envisioned. This is not a story of villains. It is a story of systems - how the logic of liberation, applied without infrastructure, can become a different kind of confinement. How the boundaries between mental health history and true crime are, in the end, tragically thin.
Community health centers that were meant to absorb the displaced were often never built. The mentally ill drifted - onto streets, into jails, into the margins of cities ill-equipped to receive them. Jails and prisons became, by default, the new asylums. Shadows of Reform traces the historical arc of this transformation: from Dorothea Dix's nineteenth-century crusade to build humane institutions, through the pharmacological optimism of chlorpromazine and Thorazine, through the landmark Community Mental Health Act of 1963, and into the cascading failures that followed.
It examines how well-intentioned legal reforms - rewriting civil commitment standards, curtailing involuntary treatment - collided with underfunded systems and tough-on-crime politics to produce outcomes no reformer had envisioned. This is not a story of villains. It is a story of systems - how the logic of liberation, applied without infrastructure, can become a different kind of confinement. How the boundaries between mental health history and true crime are, in the end, tragically thin.




















