Madness and Social Change: Autobiography of the Brazilian Psychiatric Reform
Intro -- Foreword to the International Edition, by Manuel Desviat Brazil (1976-2016) - Four Decades at the Forefront of Psychosocial Care for Psychic Suffering -- References -- Foreword to the Brazilian Edition -- Author's Preface to the International Edition -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Dimensions of the Psychiatric Reform as a Complex Social Process -- 1.1 Theoretical-Conceptual or Epistemological Dimension -- 1.2 Technical-Assistance Dimension -- 1.3 Legal-Political Dimension -- 1.4 Sociocultural Dimension: Producing a New Social Place for Madness and Psychological Suffering -- References -- Chapter 2: The "Industry of Madness" Is Denounced: Birth of the Brazilian Psychiatric Reform -- 2.1 The 1980s: From Institutional Criticism to the "Institutionalization" of the Psychiatric Reform -- 2.2 Late 1980s: From Institutional Critique to De-institutionalizing Practices -- 2.2.1 Center for Psychosocial Care -- 2.2.2 Innovative Experience of the Santos Substitutive Network -- 2.2.3 The NAPS Project Within the Framework of the Santos Proposal -- 2.3 The End of the 1980s: The Psychiatric Reform Bill -- 2.3.1 The Network of Comprehensive Mental Health Care as a Substitute for Mental Institutions in São Paulo -- 2.4 The 1990s: Caracas Declaration and Psychiatric Reform in the Latin American Region -- 2.5 Expansion of the Notion and Meaning of Networks and Psychosocial Care Services -- 2.6 The 2000s Onward: Advances, Innovations, and Problems During Psychiatric Reform -- 2.6.1 A New Political Framework: RAPS -- 2.6.2 Mental Health in Primary Care: Radical De-institutionalization? -- References -- Chapter 3: The Sociocultural Dimension: Concrete Experiences About Production of a New Social Place for Madness and Psychological Suffering.