Governing Through Competency: Race, Pathologization, and the Limits of Mental Health Outreach

This thesis examines how cultural competency operates as a regime of governmentality. Inspired by Foucauldian genealogy, institutional ethnography, and Said’s concept of contrapuntality, this thesis problematizes the seamless production of racialized bodies in relation to mental disorder. I begin by...

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Main Author: Tam, Louise
Other Authors: Razack, Sherene
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/33677
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-336772013-11-05T03:40:56ZGoverning Through Competency: Race, Pathologization, and the Limits of Mental Health OutreachTam, Louiseconstruction of mental disorderracial governmentalityimmigrant womenminority youthcultural competencycross-cultural mental healthBrief Symptom InventoryAttitudes Towards Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scalecommunity needs assessmentPostcolonial Studiesinstitutional ethnographyDisability Studiesracedeviancedepressionself-esteemmadnessoppression as diseaseanti-racismhealth equityantipsychiatryfeministFoucauldian genealogycontrapuntal readingpsychiatric survivorsmulticultural practicetechnologies of the selfsocial organization of mental health06310453070303390385This thesis examines how cultural competency operates as a regime of governmentality. Inspired by Foucauldian genealogy, institutional ethnography, and Said’s concept of contrapuntality, this thesis problematizes the seamless production of racialized bodies in relation to mental disorder. I begin by elaborating a theoretical framework for interpreting race and madness as mutually constructed ordering practices. I then analyze what cultural competence produces and sustains in a position paper published by the Ontario Federation of Community Mental Health and Addiction Programs. I argue the Federation dismisses ongoing institutional violence—suggesting it is simply the perception, as opposed to the everyday reality, of discrimination that causes problems such as low educational attainment among youth of colour. To further support this claim, I deconstruct narratives of low self-esteem, maladaptive coping, depression, and denial of mental illness in the community needs assessments of two of the Federation’s member organizations: Hong Fook and Across Boundaries.Razack, Sherene2012-112012-11-29T16:49:03ZNO_RESTRICTION2012-11-29T16:49:03Z2012-11-29Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/33677en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic construction of mental disorder
racial governmentality
immigrant women
minority youth
cultural competency
cross-cultural mental health
Brief Symptom Inventory
Attitudes Towards Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale
community needs assessment
Postcolonial Studies
institutional ethnography
Disability Studies
race
deviance
depression
self-esteem
madness
oppression as disease
anti-racism
health equity
antipsychiatry
feminist
Foucauldian genealogy
contrapuntal reading
psychiatric survivors
multicultural practice
technologies of the self
social organization of mental health
0631
0453
0703
0339
0385
spellingShingle construction of mental disorder
racial governmentality
immigrant women
minority youth
cultural competency
cross-cultural mental health
Brief Symptom Inventory
Attitudes Towards Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale
community needs assessment
Postcolonial Studies
institutional ethnography
Disability Studies
race
deviance
depression
self-esteem
madness
oppression as disease
anti-racism
health equity
antipsychiatry
feminist
Foucauldian genealogy
contrapuntal reading
psychiatric survivors
multicultural practice
technologies of the self
social organization of mental health
0631
0453
0703
0339
0385
Tam, Louise
Governing Through Competency: Race, Pathologization, and the Limits of Mental Health Outreach
description This thesis examines how cultural competency operates as a regime of governmentality. Inspired by Foucauldian genealogy, institutional ethnography, and Said’s concept of contrapuntality, this thesis problematizes the seamless production of racialized bodies in relation to mental disorder. I begin by elaborating a theoretical framework for interpreting race and madness as mutually constructed ordering practices. I then analyze what cultural competence produces and sustains in a position paper published by the Ontario Federation of Community Mental Health and Addiction Programs. I argue the Federation dismisses ongoing institutional violence—suggesting it is simply the perception, as opposed to the everyday reality, of discrimination that causes problems such as low educational attainment among youth of colour. To further support this claim, I deconstruct narratives of low self-esteem, maladaptive coping, depression, and denial of mental illness in the community needs assessments of two of the Federation’s member organizations: Hong Fook and Across Boundaries.
author2 Razack, Sherene
author_facet Razack, Sherene
Tam, Louise
author Tam, Louise
author_sort Tam, Louise
title Governing Through Competency: Race, Pathologization, and the Limits of Mental Health Outreach
title_short Governing Through Competency: Race, Pathologization, and the Limits of Mental Health Outreach
title_full Governing Through Competency: Race, Pathologization, and the Limits of Mental Health Outreach
title_fullStr Governing Through Competency: Race, Pathologization, and the Limits of Mental Health Outreach
title_full_unstemmed Governing Through Competency: Race, Pathologization, and the Limits of Mental Health Outreach
title_sort governing through competency: race, pathologization, and the limits of mental health outreach
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/33677
work_keys_str_mv AT tamlouise governingthroughcompetencyracepathologizationandthelimitsofmentalhealthoutreach
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