La (de)colonización va por dentro: Profesionales de salud mental en el trabajo con migrantes haitianos y agrupaciones de usuarios y exusuarios activistas de servicios de salud mental en Chile

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

La (de)colonización va por dentro: Profesionales de salud mental en el trabajo con migrantes haitianos y agrupaciones de usuarios y exusuarios activistas de servicios de salud mental en Chile. / Abarca Brown, Gabriel Antonio; Montenegro, Cristian.

I: Revista de Antropología Social, Bind 32, Nr. 2, 2023, s. 129-140.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Abarca Brown, GA & Montenegro, C 2023, 'La (de)colonización va por dentro: Profesionales de salud mental en el trabajo con migrantes haitianos y agrupaciones de usuarios y exusuarios activistas de servicios de salud mental en Chile', Revista de Antropología Social, bind 32, nr. 2, s. 129-140. https://doi.org/10.5209/raso.91746

APA

Abarca Brown, G. A., & Montenegro, C. (2023). La (de)colonización va por dentro: Profesionales de salud mental en el trabajo con migrantes haitianos y agrupaciones de usuarios y exusuarios activistas de servicios de salud mental en Chile. Revista de Antropología Social, 32(2), 129-140. https://doi.org/10.5209/raso.91746

Vancouver

Abarca Brown GA, Montenegro C. La (de)colonización va por dentro: Profesionales de salud mental en el trabajo con migrantes haitianos y agrupaciones de usuarios y exusuarios activistas de servicios de salud mental en Chile. Revista de Antropología Social. 2023;32(2):129-140. https://doi.org/10.5209/raso.91746

Author

Abarca Brown, Gabriel Antonio ; Montenegro, Cristian. / La (de)colonización va por dentro: Profesionales de salud mental en el trabajo con migrantes haitianos y agrupaciones de usuarios y exusuarios activistas de servicios de salud mental en Chile. I: Revista de Antropología Social. 2023 ; Bind 32, Nr. 2. s. 129-140.

Bibtex

@article{b0b6b3e383214f93b5d80007c742c602,
title = "La (de)colonizaci{\'o}n va por dentro: Profesionales de salud mental en el trabajo con migrantes haitianos y agrupaciones de usuarios y exusuarios activistas de servicios de salud mental en Chile",
abstract = "We explore the epistemic, political, and ethical contradictions and conflicts that mental health practitioners embody in their work and interaction with Haitian migrants and activist service-user and ex-user groups in the public health system in Chile –marked by neoliberalization processes during the last thirty years. Based on two ethnographies, we argue that the work with both groups interrogates mental health practitioners regarding the scope of their disciplines and on a professional-individual level. Rather than passively reproducing discourses and practices of domination, practitioners embody contradictions and conflicts triggered by the incompatibility between psy-disciplines; the knowledge and practices anchored in Haitian-Creole medicine and Vodou; and the radical questioning of diagnoses and treatments developed by activist service-user and ex-user groups. Practitioners question and challenge the universalist conceptions of identity, the mind, suffering, and treatment. Rather than an intellectual exercise, we emphasize that a call for decolonization implies the politicization of professional practice in –or outside– the borders of psychiatry and mental health as a system of government.",
author = "{Abarca Brown}, {Gabriel Antonio} and Cristian Montenegro",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.5209/raso.91746",
language = "Spansk",
volume = "32",
pages = "129--140",
journal = "Revista de Antropolog{\'i}a Social",
issn = "1988-2831",
publisher = "Universidad Complutense Madrid",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - La (de)colonización va por dentro: Profesionales de salud mental en el trabajo con migrantes haitianos y agrupaciones de usuarios y exusuarios activistas de servicios de salud mental en Chile

AU - Abarca Brown, Gabriel Antonio

AU - Montenegro, Cristian

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - We explore the epistemic, political, and ethical contradictions and conflicts that mental health practitioners embody in their work and interaction with Haitian migrants and activist service-user and ex-user groups in the public health system in Chile –marked by neoliberalization processes during the last thirty years. Based on two ethnographies, we argue that the work with both groups interrogates mental health practitioners regarding the scope of their disciplines and on a professional-individual level. Rather than passively reproducing discourses and practices of domination, practitioners embody contradictions and conflicts triggered by the incompatibility between psy-disciplines; the knowledge and practices anchored in Haitian-Creole medicine and Vodou; and the radical questioning of diagnoses and treatments developed by activist service-user and ex-user groups. Practitioners question and challenge the universalist conceptions of identity, the mind, suffering, and treatment. Rather than an intellectual exercise, we emphasize that a call for decolonization implies the politicization of professional practice in –or outside– the borders of psychiatry and mental health as a system of government.

AB - We explore the epistemic, political, and ethical contradictions and conflicts that mental health practitioners embody in their work and interaction with Haitian migrants and activist service-user and ex-user groups in the public health system in Chile –marked by neoliberalization processes during the last thirty years. Based on two ethnographies, we argue that the work with both groups interrogates mental health practitioners regarding the scope of their disciplines and on a professional-individual level. Rather than passively reproducing discourses and practices of domination, practitioners embody contradictions and conflicts triggered by the incompatibility between psy-disciplines; the knowledge and practices anchored in Haitian-Creole medicine and Vodou; and the radical questioning of diagnoses and treatments developed by activist service-user and ex-user groups. Practitioners question and challenge the universalist conceptions of identity, the mind, suffering, and treatment. Rather than an intellectual exercise, we emphasize that a call for decolonization implies the politicization of professional practice in –or outside– the borders of psychiatry and mental health as a system of government.

U2 - 10.5209/raso.91746

DO - 10.5209/raso.91746

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

VL - 32

SP - 129

EP - 140

JO - Revista de Antropología Social

JF - Revista de Antropología Social

SN - 1988-2831

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 358104690