Co-Production and Structural Oppression in Public Mental Health

Alana Wilde
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Abstract

Abstract Co-production, in the field of mental health, aims to bring together academic and clinical researchers and those with lived experience. Often, research projects informed by this methodology involve the meeting of opposing attitudes, whether to the legitimacy of psychiatry, determinants of mental ill health, or the most appropriate interventions. This has meant that whilst some have reported positive experiences of co-production, many people with lived experience of mental ill health, sometimes referred to as ‘experts by experience’ (EbE), report harms which have taken place or been perpetuated during co-produced research projects. In the literature, nearly always, this is understood as a kind of epistemic injustice in Miranda Fricker's sense. In this paper, I argue that whilst Fricker's view does provide a plausible explanation of what's at play, we can gain more insight into the structural factors which exclude EbE by applying a framework of epistemic oppression. By highlighting the systemic and structural factors which work to keep certain knowers and their contributions out of our collective epistemic resources, we begin to understand the enormity of the task required to redress injustices in our knowledge production systems.
公共精神卫生中的合作生产和结构性压迫
在精神卫生领域,联合制作旨在将学术和临床研究人员以及有生活经验的人聚集在一起。通常,采用这种方法的研究项目涉及对立态度的会面,无论是对精神病学的合法性、精神疾病的决定因素还是最适当的干预措施。这意味着,虽然有些人报告了合作制作的积极经历,但许多有过精神疾病生活经历的人,有时被称为"经验专家" (EbE),报告了在合作制作的研究项目中已经发生或持续存在的危害。在文学作品中,这几乎总是被理解为米兰达·弗里克意义上的一种认识上的不公正。在本文中,我认为尽管Fricker的观点确实提供了一个合理的解释,但我们可以通过应用认知压迫的框架来更深入地了解排除EbE的结构性因素。通过强调将某些知识分子及其贡献排除在我们的集体知识资源之外的系统性和结构性因素,我们开始了解纠正知识生产系统中的不公正所需要的任务的艰巨性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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