Ties That Enable
168 pages, 6 x 9
4 color images, 2 tables
Paperback
Release Date:13 Aug 2021
ISBN:9781978818750
Hardcover
Release Date:13 Aug 2021
ISBN:9781978818767
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Ties That Enable

Community Solidarity for People Living with Serious Mental Health Problems

Rutgers University Press
Ties that Enable is written for students, providers, and advocates seeking to understand how best to improve mental health care – be it for themselves, their loved ones, their clients, or for the wider community. The authors integrate their knowledge of mental health care as researchers, teachers, and advocates and rely on the experiences of people living with severe mental health problems to help understand the sources of community solidarity. Communities are the primary source of social solidarity, and given the diversity of communities, solutions to the problems faced by individuals living with severe mental health problems must start with community level initiatives. “Ties that Enable” examines the role of a faith-based community group in providing a sense of place and belonging as well as reinforcing a valued social identity. The authors argue that mental health reform efforts need to move beyond a focus on individual recovery to more complex understandings of the meaning of community care. In addition, mental health care needs to move from a medical model to a social model which sees the roots of mental illness and recovery as lying in society, not the individual. It is our society’s inability to provide inclusive supportive environments which restrict the ability of individuals to recover. This book provides insights into how communities and system level reforms can promote justice and the higher ideals we aspire to as a society.
Scheid and Smith shed light on the ways that, over time, changes in policy and trends in mental health care have actually left people stranded in 'the community.' This is a welcome and unique addition to the work on people with serious mental illness, and I enthusiastically look forward to seeing, using, and citing it. Kerry Dobransky, author of Managing Madness in the Community: The Challenge of Contemporary Mental Health Care
Ties that Enable provides an excellent qualitative complement to the quantitative research on recovery and mental illness. The authors’ detailed accounts of client relationships and experiences are excellent.’
 
Fred E. Markowitz, Department of Sociology, Northern Illinois University
Scheid and Smith shed light on the ways that, over time, changes in policy and trends in mental health care have actually left people stranded in 'the community.' This is a welcome and unique addition to the work on people with serious mental illness, and I enthusiastically look forward to seeing, using, and citing it. Kerry Dobransky, author of Managing Madness in the Community: The Challenge of Contemporary Mental Health Care
Ties that Enable provides an excellent qualitative complement to the quantitative research on recovery and mental illness. The authors’ detailed accounts of client relationships and experiences are excellent.’
 
Fred E. Markowitz, Department of Sociology, Northern Illinois University
TERESA L. SCHEID is a professor of sociology at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte with joint appointments in Public Policy and Health Services Research. She has published widely on the organization and delivery of mental health services and the work of mental health, including Reducing Race Differences in Direct-to-Consumer Pharmaceutical Advertising: The Case for Regulation. Scheid has also examined the impact of a number of legislative mandates including outpatient commitment and the Americans with Disabilities Act, and is currently analyzing state level legislative reforms to mental health care.

MEGAN SMITH earned her PhD in Sociology in 2017 from Emory University and her M.A. in Sociology from UNC-Charlotte. Her dissertation, entitled Enhancing Choice, Capabilities, and Community for Chronically Mentally Ill Persons: The Social Context of a Faith-Based Day Program, is an ethnographic case study employing a grounded theory approach. In addition to her research, she was awarded the Andrew Mellon Teaching Fellowship during her tenure at Emory and taught mental health and research methods courses at Clark Atlanta University. Currently, she is a full time adjunct lecturer at UNC-Charlotte in the Sociology Department where she teaches courses in mental health, medical sociology, and criminology.
 
Preface 
1 The Current Impasse over Mental Health Care 
2 Looking Back: Reflections on the Reality of Community-Based Mental Health Care 
3 Being a “Right Person”: Social Acceptance in a Faith-Based Program 
4 Doing the “Best” We Can: Developing Social Relationships and Overcoming Isolation 
5 Us and Them: Confronting Recovery in the Face of Marginalization 
6 Going Backward: Are We Doomed to Repeat the Failures of the Past? 
7 Working toward Community Solidarity and Social Justice 
Epilogue 
Acknowledgments
Notes 
References 
Index 
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