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The Roots of the Recovery Movement in Psychiatry: Lessons Learned. By Larry Davidson, Jaak Rakfeldt & John Strauss. Wiley-Blackwell. 2010. £45.00 (hb). 294pp. ISBN: 9780470777633.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Glenn Roberts*
Affiliation:
Wonford House Hospital, Dryden Road, Exeter EX2 5AF, UK. Email: glenn.roberts@nhs.net
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Abstract

Type
Columns
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2011 

Many have seen the current recovery movement, with its emphasis on personalisation, social inclusion and choice, as having arisen from earlier civil rights and disabilities movements. Here is a book that substantiates that claim through a succession of biographical sketches of innovators and activists of the past couple of hundred years.

Davidson and his colleagues have engagingly illustrated the continuity and progression of ‘values in action’ through the lives of people who have become our inspirational forefathers. Starting with Pinel, who inaugurated both moral treatment and the modern psychiatric era, they go on to social activists, Dorothea Dix and Jane Adams, pioneers of deinstitutionalisation, Erving Goffman and Franco Bassaglia, crusading civil rights and race leaders, including Martin Luther King, humane psychiatrists, Adolph Meyer and John Strauss and finally psychological and economic theorists, Lev Vygotsky and Amartya Sen.

Most of these names are familiar to even a casual student of the history of psychiatry but here is an opportunity to appreciate that nobody gets it right completely and to focus on what lessons can and should be carried forward as well as to underline cautionary notes concerning what we should avoid repeating.

However, it is initially puzzling that in a book dedicated to the roots of the recovery movement none of those reviewed specifically espoused ‘recovery’ as we currently know it. The authors could have written to their title by offering an annotated who's who of more recent recovery champions. Instead, they have offered something more profound and helpful by tracing the guiding principles of recovery back through various forms of emancipatory humanism and values-led activism which has fuelled progressive change throughout the modern era.

This inspirational and supportive book concludes with an imagined conversation between those reviewed. Having drawn the reader into this challenging conversation as a witness, the authors conclude by sending him out to continue the debate with friends and colleagues but certainly better equipped.

This is an important contribution from international leads, which offers the reader interested in recovery an awareness of its substantial ethical and political foundations and the need to sustain a civil rights perspective.

References

By Larry Davidson, Jaak Rakfeldt & John Strauss. Wiley-Blackwell. 2010. £ 45.00 (hb). 294pp. ISBN: 9780470777633.

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