Overview
- Editors:
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Nazilla Khanlou
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York University, Toronto, Canada
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F. Beryl Pilkington
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York University, Toronto, Canada
Draws from multidisciplinary perspectives and scholarship
Addresses social and societal factors, rather than pathologies or deficits in individuals
Emphasizes positive aspects of women's mental health: resilience, resistance, agency
Each chapter includes an implications section relating to policy, practice, or research
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Table of contents (24 chapters)
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Structural Determinants of Women’s Mental Health
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- Alexis Buettgen, Rachel Gorman, Marcia Rioux, Kuhu Das, Soumya Vinayan
Pages 3-18
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- Pat Armstrong, Irene Jansen
Pages 19-32
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- Kausar Saeed Khan, Ghazala Rafique, Sohail Amir Ali Bawani, Fatema Hasan, Anis Haroon
Pages 33-50
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- Noreen Stuckless, Brenda Toner, Naila Butt
Pages 51-66
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Community, Social Support, and Women’s Mental Health
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- Karen Aroian, Nizam Uddin, Darshana Ullah
Pages 69-81
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- Mahdieh Dastjerdi, Afkham Mardukhi
Pages 83-95
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- Kyle D. Killian, Sabine Lehr
Pages 97-109
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- Sara Podio Guidugli, Claudio Barbaranelli, Chiara Giacomantonio, Domenico Di Giorgio, Marta Gramazio
Pages 111-125
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Health and Social Services, Resistance, and Women’s Mental Health
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Front Matter
Pages 127-127
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- Lia Carneiro Silveira, Isabella Costa Martins, Zenilda Rodrigues
Pages 129-143
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- Andrea LaMarre, Carla Rice, Merryl Bear
Pages 145-160
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- Marta Reis, Lúcia Ramiro, Margarida Gaspar de Matos
Pages 161-170
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- Ali Firoozabadi, Nick Bellissimo, Ahmad Ghanizadeh, Abrisham Tanhatan Nesseri
Pages 171-182
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Displacement, Migration, Resettlement, and Women’s Mental Health
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Front Matter
Pages 183-183
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- Théogène-Octave Gakuba, Mohamadou Sall, Gilbert Fokou, Christiane Kouakou, Martin Amalaman, Solange Kone
Pages 185-200
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- Hyun-Sil Kim, Hun-Soo Kim, Leai Tupas
Pages 201-215
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- Jehane Simona Moussa, Marco Pecoraro, Didier Ruedin, Serge Houmard
Pages 217-231
About this book
This book focuses on the social and societal context of women's mental health. Drawing from multidisciplinary perspectives and scholarship, it pays particular attention to how women's mental health is experienced at the personal level, yet it is influenced by their relationships and interacts with the larger societal context (such as prevailing gender equality policies, income distribution, role burden, peace and security). Specific attention is given to the positive aspects of women's mental health (such as agency, resilience) and how women’s personal relations across diverse domains (such as family, work, neighbourhoods) are constructed and influenced by, and in turn influence, broader societal structures/ policies/ opportunities. A unique feature of this book is that, at the end of each chapter, there is a Response section written by a non-academic such as a community member, practitioner or policy maker in which the invited authors respond to the chapter texts in the form of narrative, poetry, and/or prose, according to their various backgrounds, interests, and experiences.
Reviews
“Women’s Mental Health is an important resource for mental health professionals, policy makers, and mental and public health administrators. It provides a wealth of data, insight into women’s lived experiences, culturally sensitive recommendations, and practical solutions to the range and variety of circumstances that have a profound and lasting impact on women and their families and communities.” (Janet Etzi, PsycCRITIQUES, Vol. 61 (14), April, 2016)
About the editors
Dr. Khanlou is the women's health research chair in mental health in the Faculty of Health at York University and an associate professor in its School of Nursing. Professor Khanlou's clinical background is in psychiatric nursing. Her overall program of research is situated in the interdisciplinary field of community-based mental health promotion in general, and mental health promotion among youth and women in multicultural and immigrant-receiving settings in particular. Dr. Khanlou was the 2011-2013 co-director of the Ontario Multicultural Health Applied Research Network. She is founder of the International Network on Youth Integration, an international network for knowledge exchange and collaboration on youth. Dr. Pilkington is associate professor in the School of Nursing, Faculty of Health, York University, Toronto, Canada, where she has been a faculty member since 1999. From 2009 to 2012 she served as the School’s first associate director for research and graduate education, and she is currently the inaugural coordinator for an interdisciplinary BA and BSc program in global health. Dr. Pilkington’s clinical background is in maternal-newborn and women’s health. Current research includes community-based studies with youth and sole support mothers living in a marginalized neighbourhood, with a focus on resilience, health and well-being.