Abstract
The paper begins by noting the absence of any sustained analysis of post-war mental health pressure groups and movements. This is deemed problematic because such movements and groups have had a strong presence during this period and because movements, as such, are afforded a central role in much contemporary sociology on account of their role in the process of social change. Next the paper considers how such analysis should be conducted, and suggests a three-phase model for periodising the activity of the groups and movements of the post-war era. The largest part of the paper is then devoted to an examination of one particular aspect of the first phase: the birth of the National Association For Mental Health and their activities in their first ten years of life. Much can be learned from the study of this group.
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Crossley, N. (1998). Transforming the mental health field: The early history of the National Association for Mental Health. Sociology of Health and Illness. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.00111
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