Articles / Chapitres
Intégration communautaire
Babarik, Paul. “The Buried Canadian Roots of Community Psychology.” Journal of Community Psychology 7 (1979): 362-367.
Baird, G. “999 Queen: A Collective Failure of Imagination.” City Magazine 2,3,4 (1976): 34-59.
Burnet, Jean R. “The Urban Community and Changing Moral Standards.” In Michiel Horn and Ronald Sabourin (eds.). Studies in Canadian Social History. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1974: 298-325.
Dorvil, Henri. “La désinstitutionnalisation: du fou de village aux fous des villes.” Bulletin l’histoire politique, numéro spécial Folie et société XIXe-XXe siècles 10:3 (2002): 88- 104.
Everett, B. “Something is Happening: The Contemporary Consumer and Psychiatric Survivor Movement in Historical Context.” The Journal of Mind and Behaviour 15 (1994): 55-70.
Hendrie, H.C. and J. Varsamis. “The Winnipeg Psychopathic Hospital, 1919-1969: An Experiment in Community Psychiatry.” Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal 16:2 (April, 1971): 185-186.
Herman, Nancy J. and C.M. Smith. “Mental Hospital Depopulation in Canada: Patient Perspectives.” Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 34:5 (June, 1989): 386-392.
Kappel, Bruce. “A History of People First in Canada.” In Gunnar Dybwad and Hank Bersani Jr. (eds.). New Voices: Self-Advocacy by People with Disabilities. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Brookline Books, 1996: 93-129.
Lebel, Alain. «Histoire et évolution des hôpitaux de jour», Prisme 4:4 (automne, 1994): 374-386.
Lecompte, Yves. «De la dynamique des politiques de désinstitutionnalisation au Québec», Santé mentale au Québec 22:2 (automne, 1997): 7-24.
MacLennan, David. “Beyond the Asylum: Professionalization and the Mental Hygiene Movement in Canada, 1914-28.” Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 4:1 (1987): 7-24.
McLennan, David. “Beyond the Asylum: Professionalization and the Mental Hygiene Movement in Canada 1914-1928.” Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 4 (1987): 7-23.
Migneault, Pierre. « La révolution tranquille et la révolution psychiatrique au Québec », Revue Réseau, numéro spécial 1, 1978, publié par le Centre Hospitalier Robert-Giffard.
Montigny, Edgar-André. “The Decline in Family Care for the Aged in Nineteenth-Century Ontario: Fact or Fiction.” Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 11:2 (1994): 357-373.
Morell-Bellai, Tammy L. and Katherine M. Boydell. “The Experience of Mental Health Consumers as Researchers.” Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health 13:1 (Spring, 1994): 97-110.
Nootens, Thierry. “Famille, communauté et folie au tournant du siècle.” Revue d’histoire de l’Amerique francaise 53:1 (été, 1999): 93-119.
Nootens, Thierry. “‘For Years We Have Never Had a Happy Home”: Madness and Families in Nineteenth-Century Montreal.” In James E. Moran and David Wright (eds.). Mental Health and Canadian Society: Historical Perspectives. Montréal-Kingston: McGill- Queen’s University Press, 2006.
Odell, Tracy. “Disability and Relationships.” Canadian Woman Studies 13:4 (Summer, 1993): 56-58.
Reaume, Geoffrey. “No Profits, Just a Pittance: Work, Compensation and People Defined as Mentally Disabled in Ontario, 1964-1990.” In Steven Noll and James W. Trent (eds.). Mental Retardation in America. New York: NYU Press, 2004.
Reaume, Geoffrey. “Archives, Activists and History: Psychiatric Survivor Archives, Toronto.” Sigerist Circle Newsletter and Bibliography 18 (Winter, 2002).
Reaume, Geoffrey. “Mental Hospital Patients and Family Relations in Southern Ontario, 1880- 1930.” In Lori Chambers and Edgar-André Montigny (eds.). Family Matters: Papers in Post-Confederation Canadian Family History. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press, 1998.
Rousseau, Cecile. “Community Empowerment: The Alternative Resources Movement in Quebec.” Community Mental Health Journal 29:6 (December, 1993): 535-546.
Smith, Dorothy E. “The Statistics on Mental Illness: (What They Will Not Tell Us About Women and Why).” In Dorothy E. Smith and Sara J. David (eds.). Women Look at Psychiatry. Vancouver: Press Gang Publishers, 1975: 73-119.
Stewart, Stormie. “The Elderly Poor in Rural Ontario: Inmates of the Wellington County House of Industry, 1877-1907.” Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 3 (Charlottetown, 1993): 217-234. Reprinted in Lori Chambers and Edgar-André Montigny (eds.). Family Matters: Papers in Post-Confederation Canadian Family History. (Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press, 1998): 417-436.
Sturgis, James L. ‘‘‘The spectre of a drunkard’s grave’: One Family’s Battle with Alcohol in Late Nineteenth-Century Canada.” In Cheryl Krasnick Warsh (ed.). Drink in Canada: Historical Essays. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1993: 115-143.
Trainor, John S., Tammy Lee Morrell-Bellai, Ron Ballantyne and Katherine M. Boydell. “Housing for People with with Mental Illnesses: A Comparison of Models and an Examination of the Growth of Alternative Housing in Canada.” Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 38:7 (September, 1993): 494-501.
Warsh, C. Krasnick. ‘‘‘John Barleycorn Must Die’: An Introduction to the Social History of Alcohol.” In Cheryl Krasnick Warsh (ed.). Drink in Canada: Historical Essays. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1993: 3-26.
Weitz, Don. “On Our Own: A Self-Help Model.” In D. Paul Lumsden (ed.). Community Mental Health Action. Ottawa: The Canadian Public Health Association, 1984: 312-320.
“Will the Charter Change Sheltered Workshops?” Phoenix Rising: The Voice of the Psychiatrized 5:2-3 (August, 1985): 31A-32A.