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Study Group on Mental Health and Society

Projects Led by Graduate Students at Ars Vivendi in Academic Year 2009 & 2010
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■Table of Contents:

Plan of 2010
Plan of 2009
Activity Records of 2009
Related Issues and People of 2009


■Our Project Plan for 2010

◆Aim: To study issues related to mental health, medical care and society theoretically and experimentally

◆Project Members *as of Academic Year 2010
MINO Koji (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University) (Project Leader)
WATANABE Aiko (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
KATAYAMA Tomoya (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
MATSUEDA Akiko (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
NAKA Asayo (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
FUJIWARA Nobuyuki (PD, Kinugasa Research Organization, Ritsumeikan University)
YAMAGUCHI Maki (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
ABE Akane (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
YOSHIDA Sachie (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
●SUEYASU Tamio (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
SUGIHARA Tsutomu (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
NAKATA Kiichi (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
UEMURA Kaname (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
SAITOU Yuka (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
AOKI Chihoko (Post Doctoral Fellow at Ritsumeikan University)
KOBAYASHI Hayato (PD, Kinugasa Research Organization, Ritsumeikan University)

◆Advisory Professor: TATEIWA Shin'ya (Professor, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)


1. Topics and Contribution to the Global COE Program Ars Vivendi
(1)Topics, Objectives and Impacts
Topics:

This project aims to conduct theoretical and experimental research on issues related to mental health, medical care and society, pursuing the possibility of adding a new value. The project members will present their research achievements at seminars etc. according to their experimental or theoretical interests. Then we will deepen each member's academic inquiries, share the questions among members for further discussions and investigate the relationship between mental medical care, health and welfare and society.

Objectives:

There have been few opportunities provided for the students studying on this theme to get together and exchange their research achievements and have interactive discussions. This project was founded and has been conducted in order to provide such opportunities; to extract potential capacities of the project members and to encourage them to report more on their academic achievements.

At this point, we have held five monthly seminars and had nine research presentations. These seminars and discussions encouraged the project members to write academic papers and make presentations in academic societies as described below or to clarify their research directions and focus. Not only the members who made presentations in seminars but also the ones who attended the seminars also have achieved new viewpoints for their research and gained possibilities to have joint research.

The achievements made in the academic year 2009 by the project members consist of 12 academic papers, 5 publication of academic books, 18 academic presentations (12 oral presentations and 6 poster presentations), and three others including acquisition of two private research grants. Judging from the fact that the presentations and discussions in seminars have led to these achievements, we believe our objectives for 2009 have been accomplished.

Based on the achievements of the academic year 2009, we have set the following two objectives for the academic year of 2010:

1) To have opportunities to discuss each other's research achievements
Considering our achievements in academic year 2009, we believe having opportunities to discuss each other's research achievemtns is effective and necessary for the project members to progress their research. We position the Study Group on Mental Health and Society as the discussion forum for each member's research this academic year, following the previous year's successful experiences, to accomplish more academic achievements.

2) To have achievements as a group
We believe our project members have individually accomplished some research achievements last academic year. However, we have not yet produced our research achievements as a group of the Study Group on Mental Health and Society or the group of graduate students studying on mental health.

This academic year, the journal Ars Vivendi Vol. 3 plans to feature issues on mental health, and many of our project members plan to contribute to it. We hope to clarify a certain direction as the group of scholars on mental health by holding discussions in the study group.

In addition, we plan to hold an open interview with Ms. YAMAMOTO Mari (pen-name: NAGANO Eiko of the Japan National Group of Mentally Disabled People in February 2011, and to let people know its result through Report Issued by Research Center for Ars Vivendi in academic year 2011. We already have obtained her informal consent about this. Ms. Yamamoto has been active in the Japan National Group of Mentally Disabled People since the 1970s. She has published many statements on mental health and welfare systems and their improvement, especially on "the Act on Medical Care and Treatment for Persons Who Have Caused Serious Cases Under the Condition of Insanity." By inviting such key person and listening to the detailed progress and the actual experience for these statements should be not only a good preparation for our next academic year's activities but witness the historical facts.

We believe the open interview with her suits one of the aims of the Global COE Program Ars Vivendi, "1. Accumulation and Thinking: Understanding the History and Current Condition of Ars Vivendi and Analyzing the Information Theoretically," and it also includes "2. Reorganization of Studies: Creation of Opportunities and Networks for Forming Studies by Involved Persons and their Supporters." The project plans to study Ms. Yamamoto's writings and arguments before the interview.

Please refer to her http://nagano.dee.cc/ (Japanese) for more details of her writings and arguments.

Impacts:

By presenting, discussing and studying the issues which did not fit the existing academic disciplines, we can contribute to accumulate its academic information.

The open interview with Ms. YAMAMOTO is significant because it can historically uncover the movements from the activist herself. Research on Japanese movements of mentally disabled people has mainly depended on newsletters and personal records, and little is known to the researchers.

Moreover, by publishing the members' papers on Ars Vivendi Vol. 3, we can introduce this little known issue to the general public through a commercial journal. For example, clubhouse model has gathered close attention from people involved in mental health or welfare, but there has been little analysis on its actual model. Although some research on deinstitutionalization of large scale institutions for mentally disabled people exists, very little one has existed on mental hospitals.

Publishing these achievements including the interview with Ms. YAMAMOTO through Ars Vivendi Vol.3 or the Report can fulfill another aim of the Global COE Program Ars Vivendi: we have been compiling a database of information that is dispersed and buried in various fields of the natural sciences, the arts and the social sciences, and after proceeding to a thorough analysis of this information we make it accessible through our homepage.

(2)Contribution to the Global COE Program Ars Vivendi

There are quite many kinds of research among the project members which can be or should be connected with. For example, a certain period of dehospitalization and deinstitutionalization in Japan is related with anti-psychiatry, and research on anti-psychiatry is close to the historical study on tranquilizer because the research includes the historical aspects of mental medical care. There are also other studies which should be related to, such as merits and demerits of diagnosis or a strategic way of living by people with mental disabilities.

The importance of connections and collaborations among research has been acknowledged among the project members last academic year. As the result, Akane ABE's research on anti-psychiatry provided reference to Koji MINO's research survey of interviwing doctors in May 2010. Sachie YOSHIDA, in her presentation at our study seminar, referred to Maki YAMAGUCHI's presentation at the 7th Meeting of Japan Welfare Sociology Association. We plan to publish the achievements of these connections and collaborations this academic year through Ars Vivendi Vol.3.

By discussing and studying each member's research in the project, We plan to write academically respectable papers in Ars Vivendi Vol. 3.

Through the process, each member will actively present his or her research, and we hope we will not only conduct our own research but make closer collaborations among the members.

Short-term plan:
・To increase the connections between the field each member has interest and the one other members have interest in the homepage of ars vivendi. The ars vivendi homepage has quite many pages on mental health such as Mental Disabilities / Mental Health. However, it may not be easy for visitors of the homepage to find information on mental health. The reason is that such items as themes, bibliography, Who's who, academic achievements, etc. have their own pages and they do not exchange links with each other. In order to solve this problem, we plan to exchange links with the pages of the related themes, each member, achievements, and archives.
・To make presentation at academic societies or publish papers in academic journals, make new pages of the related themes on the website and publish more information as we prepare papers for Ars Vivendi Vol. 3.
・To hold the open interview with Ms. YAMAMOTO Mari of the Japan National Group of Mentally Disabled People
・To prepare to have high quality papers in the Report Issued by Research Center for Ars Vivendi as "Study Group on Mental Health and Society (tentative title)"
 To discuss the necessity of peer review (referees both inside and outside the Ars Vivendi Program), including the selection of the referees. We will explore with our advisory professor TATEIWA the possibility of publishing papers including scholars in Kyonggi University or Research Machine "Suyu+Trans", who participated in the International Program of the Global COE Program Ars Vivendi held in May 2010.

Mid- and long-term plan:
・To publish the Report Issued by Research Center for Ars Vivendi after the open interview with Ms. YAMAMOTO Mari of the Japan National Group of Mentally Disabled People.

As stated above, we believe the open interview with Ms. YAMAMOTO suits one of aims of the Global COE Program Ars Vivendi "1. Accumulation and Thinking: Understanding the History and Current Condition of Ars Vivendi and Analyzing the Information Theoretically," and also includes possibility of "2. Reorganization of Studies: Creation of Opportunities and Networks for Forming Studies by Involved Persons and their Supporters." We can also fulfill the Global COE Program Ars Vivendi's aim of encouraging research achievements and exchange in global level by inviting Korean scholars to contribute their papers to the Report Issued by Research Center for Ars Vivendi "Study Group on Mental Health and Society (tentative title)."

We believe the project can expand the research on mental health in the Global COE Program Ars Vivendi, and output its related information to the public.

2. Research Plan, Method and Publication of Research Products
1) Each project member publishes his or her academic achievements according to their theoretical or experimental interest (on Core Ethics or related academic societies, etc.). Then, we will post these achievements on the website.

2) At the same time, the project members prepare for their papers for Ars Vivendi Vol. 3.

3) The project members hold the open interview on mental health and welfare, make presentations at academic societies, and publish academic papers through peer-reviewed journals. Our existing plans are as follows:
(1) Open interview: Open interview with Ms. YAMAMOTO Mari of the Japan National Group of Mentally Disabled People. Interviewer: Prof. TATEIWA
(2) Presentation at academic societies
(3) Contribution of academic papers to Core Ethics vol.7, Ars Vivendi Vol. 3 & Ritsumeikan Journal of Human Sciences Vol. 22

The Academic Year 2009
■Our Project Plan

◆Aim: To study issues related to mental health, medical care and society theoretically and experimentally

◆Project Members *as of Academic Year 2009
MINO Koji (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University) (Project Leader)
WATANABE Aiko (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
KATAYAMA Tomoya (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
MATSUEDA Akiko (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
NAKA Asayo (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
FUJIWARA Nobuyuki (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
YAMAGUCHI Maki (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
ABE Akane (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
YOSHIDA Sachie (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
●SUEYASU Tamio (Graduate Student, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)
KOBAYASHI Hayato (PD, Kinugasa Research Organization, Ritsumeikan University)

◆Advisory Professor: TATEIWA Shin'ya (Professor, Graduate School of Core Ethics and Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University)


1. Topics and Contribution to the Global COE Program Ars Vivendi
(1)Topics, Objectives and Impacts

Topics:

This project aims to conduct theoretical and experimental research on issues related to mental health, medical care and society, pursuing the possibility of adding a new value. The project members will present their research achievements at seminars etc. according to their experimental or theoretical interests. Then we will deepen each member's academic inquiries, share the questions among members for further discussions and investigate the relationship between mental medical care, health and welfare and society.

Objectives:

Some members have conducted research on mental health, medical care and society individually. However, many of the previous academic frameworks have been based on the viewpoint of help providers, and very few studies have been conducted on the relationship between help providers and society, and on the one between the involved persons and issues, or on the social dynamics and social changes including involved persons themselves. Thus, although their research have focused on mental medical care, health and welfare, the students' interests have been expanding beyond its existing disciplines.

In addition, few opportunities have been provided for the students studying on this theme to get together and exchange their research results and have discussion, nor have few of their academic achievements been published.

Therefore, the purpose of this project is to have opportunities for graduate students to discuss their research achievements, and aims to develop their potentials and encourage them to report their achievements.

Impacts:

By presenting, discussing and studying the issues which did not fit the existing academic disciplines, we can contribute to accumulating its academic information. The "clubhouse model" is one example. Although it is a rehabilitation model for people with mental disabilities, it has been recognized only as a practice, but not as an object of academic study, so there has been very little literature on the issue.

We plan to examine not only welfare or rehabilitation, but the change of the relationships among various people around the clubhouse and its relationship with society. The significance of this project is conducting new research on mental issues, which goes beyond simple technical discussions.

(2)Contribution to the Global COE Program Ars Vivendi


There are quite many researches among the project members which can be or should be connected. For example, a period of dehospitalization in Japan is related with anti-psychiatry, and research on anti-psychiatry is close to the historical study on tranquilizer to include the historical aspects of mental medical care. There are also other studies which should be related to, such as merits and demerits of diagnosis or a strategic way of living by people with mental disabilities.

However, there have been few opportunities to discuss each member's research, nor to conduct joint research among the members. This project can provide opportunities for the members to present their research achievements, as well as expand and deepen joint research among them.

Short-term plan:
・To connect interest fields of each member with other fields in the homepage of ars vivendi.
・To make presentation at academic societies or publish papers in academic journals and make a new webpage of the related themes on the website. (Example: a new webpage on clubhouse model)

Mid- and long-term plan:
・To collect our members' papers and publish a Report Issued by Research Center for Ars Vivendi

The project will accumulate the members' academic achievements on this theme, and will disclose its related information on the website.


■Activity Records

◆Study Seminars

◆The 5th Seminar
February 20, 2010 14:00 - 17:00
MINO Koji "A Study on the Equality between People with Mental Disabilities and their Supporters: The Joint Research with the Patients and Professionals" (Draft of the Presentation for the Japanese Society for the Study of Human Welfare and Culture)
WATANABE Aiko "Why 'Paralym Art' Reminds us of Works by People with Intellectual Disabilities: The Discourse on Category Formation" (Case Report on the 'Paralym Art' and Independent Living)

◆The 4th Seminar
January 11, 2010 14:00 - 17:00
FUJIWARA Nobuyuki "Politics and Medical Knowledge on Motivation and Category of Suicide: A Local Practice on the Remaining Family by Autocide"
NAKA Asayo "Background and Actual Condition of Inpatient Medical Care Seen from the Scandal of the Mental Hospital: Yamatogawa Hospital Incident"

◆The 3rd Seminar
December 5, 2009 14:00 - 17:00
MATSUEDA Akiko"The Rise of Tranquilizer from 1950s to 1970s: Rationale of the Regulations and its Progress"
YOSHIDA Sachie "People 'Living' in a Community with 'Illness': The Record of the Life History of a Person with Mental Disabilities"

◆The 2nd Seminar
November 3, 2009 14:00 - 17:00
MINO Koji "A Study on the Equality in Mental Facilities Conducted by People with Mental Disabilities and their Supporters"
YAMAGUCHI Maki "Merits and Demerits of Excuse of 'Because of Illness': A Consideration on Discourse over Labeling People's Mind"

◆The 1st Seminar
October 3, 2009 14:00 - 17:00
・Self-introduction among members
ABE Akane "How to Perceive 'Illness' in Discussions on Anti-psychiatry

◆Presentation at Academic Societies

MINO Koji
◆June 7, 2009 "De-Institutionalize Movement in the US: Before and After the Kennedy Message," The 7th Meeting of Japan Welfare Sociology Association, Session Report, Nihon Fukushi University. Details in Japanese

◆February 27-28, 2010 "A Study on the Equality between People with Mental Disabilities and their Supporters: The Joint Research with the Patients and Professionals," The 20th Meeting of the Japanese Society for the Study of Human Welfare and Culture, Waseda University

MATSUEDA Akiko
◆June 7, 2009 "The Rise of Tranquilizer from 1950s to 1960s," The 7th Meeting of Japan Welfare Sociology Association, Nagoya Campus of Nihon Fukushi University, Abstract in Japanese

WATANABE Aiko
◆December 5-6, 2009 Report "Why 'Paralym Art' Reminds us of Works by People with Intellectual Disabilities: The Discourse on Category Formation," The Meeting of Art Meets Care Association in 2009, Keio University

YAMAGUCHI Maki
◆June 7, 2009 "Re-Examination of Problems to Give/Get the Diagnosis: Based on Niki's Opinion," The 7th Meeting of Japan Welfare Sociology Association (Program in Japanese), Nihon Fukushi University


KOBAYASHI Hayato
◆January 22, 2010 The Current Situation and Challenges of Workfare: Focusing on the Policies of New York City," Guest Speaker of the Workshop at the Graduate School for Creative Cities, Osaka City University
◆December 18, 2009 "Writing Academic Papers with Referees," Department of Social Welfare, Doshisha University Graduate School of Social Studies, Seminar for Graduate Students, Doshisha University
◆June 7, 2009, "Workfare Policy in New York City II: Focusing on Conditions of Recipients after Participating in the Programs," The 7th Annual Confference of Japan Welfare Sociology Association, Nihon Fukushi University,
[Paper in Japanese]

YOSHIDA Sachie
◆June 7, 2009 "A Study on how to Support People with Mental Disabilities to Live in Local Community: The Life History of a Person with Mental Disabilities (Japanese)
Topic Session at the 7th Convention of the Japan Welfare Sociology Association, Nihon Fukushi University, Nagoya Paper in Japanese (MS Word)

KATAYAMA Tomoya
◆November 14, 2009 "Acceptance and Belongingness in Medical Care: Which Culture we should Deliver to Children with Disabilities," The 21st Meeting of the Japan Association for Bioethics, Graduate School of Toyo Eiwa Jogakuin
◆November 1, 2009 "Proxy Decision Making and Belongingness in Medical Care: Focusing on Various Difficulties Faced by Gay and Lesbian Patients in End-of-life Care," The 28th Meeting of the Japanese Association for Philosophical and Ethical Researches in Medicine, Shiga University of Medical Science
◆October 2, 2009 IWASA Mitsuaki, HONDA Hideo, SHIMIZU Yasuo, IMAI Miho and KATAYAMA Tomoya "Long-Term Outcomes of Childhood Autism Based on Birth Cohort in Particular Areas," Lecture at Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Allied Professions Association C1-Ⅲ 3
KATAYAMA Tomoya & YAMADA Yasukazu September 26-27, 2009 "Two Structual Pressures: Protecting the Significance of Existence of Autistic Culture against Dominance of Professionals and the Merit System," The 6th Annual Convention of Japan Society of Disability Studies, Ritsumeikan University[Abstract in Japanese]

Poster Presentations

MINO Koji
◆September 26-27, 2009 "Research on Equality at Disabled Facilities for "the Involved Persons with Mental Disabilities and their Supporters: Trial of Change of Support Relationship through Research of a Club House Model," The 6th Annual Convention of Japan Society of Disability Studies, Ritsumeikan University [Abstract in Japanese]

WATANABE Aiko
◆September 26-27, 2009 "Disabled People and Generation and Development of Performing Arts: From 1970s to the Present," The 6th Annual Convention of Japan Society of Disability Studies, Ritsumeikan University

MATSUEDA Akiko
◆September 26-27, 2009 "Process of Regulation of Psychotropic Drugs and its Ground for Argument: A Case of Tranquilizer," The 6th Annual Convention of Japan Society of Disability Studies, Ritsumeikan University [Abstract in Japanese]

YAMAGUCHI Maki
◆September 26-27, 2009 "What is an Issue over Diagnosis of the Disease Name?: Asking the Name of Diagnosis and Considering from Telling Voices," The 6th Annual Convention of Japan Society of Disability Studies, Ritsumeikan University [Abstract in Japanese]

ABE Akane
◆September 26-27, 2009 "Impact of "Antipsychiatry" Made on Reform of Japanese Psychiatric Treatments in 1970s," The 6th Annual Convention of Japan Society of Disability Studies, Ritsumeikan University [Abstract in Japanese]

YOSHIDA Sachie
◆September 26-27, 2009 "Strategies for People with to Live in the Society: Life History of People with Disabilities" The 6th Annual Convention of Japan Society of Disability Studies, Ritsumeikan University [Abstract in Japanese]

◆Academic Papers
MINO Koji
◆March 31, 2010 "A Study on Mutual Support Through Employment in Clubhouse Model for People with Mental Disabilities: Its System and Ideas," Fukushi Bunka Kenkyu Vol.19
◆March 31, 2010 "A Study on the View of Japanese Mental Health Experts about De-hospitalization," Core Ethics 6: 413-423 [PDF]/[Abstract in English]

MATSUEDA Akiko
◆March 31, 2010 "Tranquilizers in Vogue: Grounds and Progress of the Control of Over-the-counter Psychotropic Drugs," Core Ethics 6: 385-399 [PDF]/[Abstract in English]

NAKA Asayo
◆March 31, 2010 "Historical Background and Problems of the Psychiatric Service Exception: Its Establishment and Discussion for Revision," Core Ethics 6: 277-286
◆February 26, 2010 "Background and Actual Condition of Inpatient Medical Care Seen from the Scandal of the Mental Hospital: Yamatogawa Hospital Incident"
 ABE Akira & HOTTA Yoshitaro (Eds.) February 26, 2010  Ethics and/of Care Report Issued by Research Center for Ars Vivendi of Ritsumeikan University, Vol.11, 258p. ISSN 1882-6539※

ABE Akane
◆March 31, 2010 "The Japanese Reform Movement of Psychiatric Medicine and Anti-psychiatry Thought in the 1970s," Core Ethics6: 1-11 [PDF]/[Abstract in English]


KOBAYASHI Hayato
AMADA Josuke, KOBAYASHI Hayato, SAITO Taku, HASHIGUCHI Shoji, MURAKAMI Kiyoshi & YAMAMOTO Takanori March 20, 2010 "Production/Labor/Distribution/Discrimination"(Round-table Discussion)
Ars Vivendi 2:14-70

◆March 20, 2010 "International Research Survey over Workfare: The U.S. versus Cuba versus Canada" (Japanese)
 Ars Vivendi 2:390-393


YOSHIDA Sachie
◆March 31, 2010 "A Study on Narrative and the Life of People with Mental Disorders: What Does the Word 'Support' Mean?," Core Ethics 6:485-496, Graduate School of Core Ethics & Frontier Sciences, Ritsumeikan University [PDF]/ [Abstract in English]
◆December 2009 "People with 'Illness' to Live in the Society: Issues Found in the Life History of a Person with Mental Disabilities," Collection of Academic Papers 27: 115-129, The Korean Scholarship Foundation

KATAYAMA Tomoya
◆February 26, 2010 "Multiculturalism within the Relationship of Nurturing: Preliminary Examination of Normative Theory over Children's Choice of Cultures"  ABE Akira & HOTTA Yoshitaro (Eds.)  February 26, 2010 Ethics and/of Care Report Issued by Research Center Ars Vivendi of Ritsumeikan University, Vol.11, 258p. ISSN 1882-6539※
◆December 2009 KATAYAMA Tomoya, HONDA Hideo et al. "Which of Four Kinds of Juice do you Choose? A Program Development to Teach How to 'Agree' as a Group to School Children with Asperger's Syndrome," Seishinka Chiryogaku 24-04

◆Academic Books

MINO Koji
◆December 8, 2009 "The U.S.: The Current Situation of Social Welfare, IV Community Mental Health," Almanac of Social Welfare in the World in 2009 pp190-200 Junposha

KATAYAMA Tomoya
◆August 2009 Serial Article "Rehabilitation and Mental Health 12: Summary: Rehabilitation Workers and Mental Health Workers 2" (Japanese), Chiiki Rihabiriteshon August 2009 Issue, Miwa Shoten
◆July 2009 Serial Article "Rehabilitation and Mental Health 11: Summary: Rehabilitation Workers and Mental Health Workers 1" Chiiki Rihabiriteshon July 2009 Issue, Miwa Shoten

KOBAYASHI Hayato
◆March 2010 "Chapter 2. Welfare Reform in California: The Competition and Consequence of Two Workfare Models," SHIBUYA Hiroshi and NAKAHAMA Takashi (Eds.) American Model Welfare State 1 Showado
◆July 15, 2009 "Workfare," VOL Collective (Ed.) (SHIRAISHI Yoshiharu & YABU Shiro edit with responsibility) VOL lexicon Ibunsha, pp.186-187

FUJIWARA Nobuyuki
◆May 25, 2009 "Spread of Psychiatric Medical Knowledge as 'Narrative' to Prevent Suicide, and the Remained Family," ASANO Hirotake & OKAZAKI Nobuo (Eds.) Facing Suicide (Japanese) Hihyosha, Mental Health Library 24 pp.119-128, ISBN-10: 4826505043, ISBN-13: 978-4826505048, 1890yen [amazon]/[kinokuniya](Japanese) (Reprinted)
◆Others

MINO Koji
◆March 2010 Research Grant of Japan Social Welfare Association (Nihon Shakai Fukushi Kousaikai) Welfare Grant for Investigation / Practical Research
◆September 18, 2009 Research Grant "Seeking a New Value of Support Relationship between Workers and Users in Clubhouse from the Research on Equality," Daido Life Welfare Foundation Grant for Research on Community Health and Welfare

KATAYAMA Tomoya
◆July 21, 2009 Lecture "A Proposal to Psychiatric Approach," The Symposium of the 13th Medical Treatment Research Convention in Yokohama City [Presentation Material in Japanese], Power Point file



■Related Links in arsvi.com

Mental Disabilities and Psychiatric Treatment (Japanese)

Translation by HIRAGA Midori
Proofread by KATAOKA Minoru
*The Japanese page is prepared by KOBAYASHI Hayato and MINO Koji
UP:July 28, 2010 REV: August 2, 2010 / August 25
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