000 01971cam a2200301 4500500
005 20250121141819.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aLinder, Audrey
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aFrom contestation to collaboration: Tensions and power struggles between consumers and professionals in psychiatry. The case of recovery in mental health
260 _c2022.
500 _a66
520 _aThe sociology of health has paid much attention to the emergence of “lay experts”, and to the ways in which lay people reappropriate medical and scientific knowledge. However, little is known about what happens to lay knowledge when it is reappropriated by professionals. Such reappropriation is analysed through the case of mental health recovery. Four particular episodes are analysed: (1) the birth of recovery within users’ and survivors’ associations as a contestation of psychiatric expertise in the United States, (2) its reappropriation by North American psychiatric professionals, (3) its importation into French-speaking Switzerland and, finally, (4) its implantation into French-speaking Swiss health policies, notably through the training of peer practitioners. For each of these episodes, this paper explores the ways in which the relationship between the knowledge of users and professionals is reconfigured, as well as the tensions that arise around the distribution and recognition of expertise between the actors involved.
690 _apsychiatry
690 _amental health
690 _alay expertise
690 _alay knowledge
690 _aRecovery
690 _aexpert knowledge
690 _apsychiatry
690 _amental health
690 _alay expertise
690 _alay knowledge
690 _aRecovery
690 _aexpert knowledge
786 0 _nSociologie | 13 | 1 | 2022-03-02 | p. 43-61 | 2108-8845
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-sociologie-2022-1-page-43?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c583199
_d583199