Articles

  • Brophy, L., Kokanovic, R., Flore, J., McSherry, B., & Herrman, H. (2019). Community Treatment Orders and Supported Decision-Making. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 10, 12 pages. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00414

  • Brophy, L., Edan, V., Gooding, P., McSherry, B., Burkett, T., Carey, S., ... & Weller, P. (2018). Community treatment orders: towards a new research agenda. Australasian Psychiatry, 26(3), 299-302. https://doi.org/10.1177%2F1039856218758543

  • Edan, V., Hamilton, B., & Brophy, L. (2021). Advance Planning in Mental Health Care: The Trouble with Terminology. Journal of law and medicine, 28(3), 655-662.

  • Edan, V., Brophy, L., Weller, P. J., Fossey, E., & Meadows, G. (2019). The experience of the use of Community Treatment Orders following recovery-oriented practice training. International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 64, 178-183. doi:10.1016/j.ijlp.2019.04.001

  • Ibrahim, M., & Morrow, M. (2015). Weaning off colonial psychiatry in Kenya. Journal of Ethics and Mental Health, pp. 1-6. Open Volume.   https://jemh.ca/issues/v9/documents/JEMH_Open-Volume_Article_Theme_Colonization_Weaning_June2015.pdf

  • Githaiga, D. (2022). https://shineindarkness.org/2022/05/04/how-does-mental-health-relate-to-human-rights/

  • Johnston, L., Milne, K., Morrow, M. (2022). Expanding institutional and involuntary approaches to mental health and substance use treatment is not an effective solution. Health Law in Canada, vol.42(4), pp. 116-121.

  • Gordon, S. (forthcoming) Human Rights: Exploring the application of supported decision-making in practice.

    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.

  • Morrow, M., & Malcoe, L. H. (Eds.). (2017). Critical inquiries for social justice in mental health. University of Toronto Press.

  • Morrow, M., & Weisser, J. (2012). Towards a social justice framework of mental health recovery. Studies in Social Justice6(1), 27-43.

  • Morrow, M., Dagg, P., & Pederson, A. (2008). Is deinstitutionalization a ‘failed experiment’? The ethics of re-institutionalization. Journal of Ethics and Mental Health, 3(2). http://www.jemh.ca/issues/v3n2/index.html.

  •  Van veen, C., Teghtsoonian, K., & Morrow, M. (2019). Enacting violence and care: Neoliberalism, knowledge claims and resistance. In A. Daley, L. Costa, & P. Beresford (Eds.), Madness, violence and power: A critical collection (pp. 59-63). Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

  • Van Veen, C., Ibrahim, M., & Morrow, M. (2018). Dangerous discourses: Masculinity, coercion and psychiatry. In J. Kilty & E. Dej (Eds.), Containing madness: Gender and ‘Psy’ in institutional contexts (pp. 241-265). UK: Palgrave MacMillan.

  • Maylea, C., Katterl, S., Johnson, B., Alvarez-Vasquez, S., Hill, N., Weller, P. (2021). Consumers' experiences of rights-based mental health laws: Lessons from Victoria, Australia. International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 78(101737). ISSN 0160-2527, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijlp.2021.101737.

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