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Editorial

The mainstreaming of recovery

Pages 217-218 | Accepted 20 May 2014, Published online: 02 Jul 2014

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

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Aimee Sinclair, Christina Fernandes, Sue Gillieatt & Lyn Mahboub. (2023) Peer work in Australian mental health policy: What ‘problems’ are we solving and to what effect(s)?. Disability & Society 0:0, pages 1-26.
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Anneliese de Wet, Charlene Sunkel & Chrisma Pretorius. (2022) Opportunities and challenges: a case for formal peer support work in mental health in a South African context. Advances in Mental Health 20:1, pages 15-25.
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Anne Dekkers, Lore Bellaert, Florien Meulewaeter, Clara De Ruysscher & Wouter Vanderplasschen. (2021) Exploring essential components of addiction recovery: a qualitative study across assisted and unassisted recovery pathways. Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 28:5, pages 486-495.
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Lore Bellaert, Thomas F. Martinelli, Wouter Vanderplasschen, David Best, Dike van de Mheen & Freya Vander Laenen. (2021) Chasing a pot of gold: an analysis of emerging recovery-oriented addiction policies in Flanders (Belgium) and The Netherlands. Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 28:5, pages 399-410.
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Trude Klevan, Reidun Jonassen, Alain Topor & Marit Borg. (2021) Mutual learning: exploring collaboration, knowledge and roles in the development of recovery-oriented services. A hermeneutic-phenomenological study. International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being 16:1.
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Anne Dekkers, Clara De Ruysscher & Wouter Vanderplasschen. (2020) Perspectives of cocaine users on addiction recovery: a qualitative study following a CRA + vouchers programme. Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 27:4, pages 282-296.
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Louise Byrne & Til Wykes. (2020) A role for lived experience mental health leadership in the age of Covid-19. Journal of Mental Health 29:3, pages 243-246.
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Clara De Ruysscher, Peter Tomlinson, Stijn Vanheule & Stijn Vandevelde. (2019) Questioning the professionalization of recovery: a collaborative exploration of a recovery process. Disability & Society 34:5, pages 797-818.
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David W Jones. (2019) Permission to Narrate: Explorations in Group Analysis, Psychoanalysis, culture. Psychodynamic Practice 25:1, pages 92-96.
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Lesley Henderson. (2018) Popular television and public mental health: creating media entertainment from mental distress. Critical Public Health 28:1, pages 106-117.
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Katherine Newman-Taylor, Christie Garner, Elizabeth Vernon-Wilson, Karlien H. W. Paas, Lesley Herbert & Sheena K. Au-Yeung. (2017) Psychometric evaluation of the hope, agency and opportunity (HAO); a brief measure of mental health recovery. Journal of Mental Health 26:6, pages 562-568.
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Rhys Price-Robertson, Angela Obradovic & Brad Morgan. (2017) Relational recovery: beyond individualism in the recovery approach. Advances in Mental Health 15:2, pages 108-120.
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Eduardo Mourão Vasconcelos & Manuel Desviat. (2017) Empowerment and recovery in the mental health field in Brazil: Socio-historical context, cross-national aspects, and critical considerations. American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation 20:3, pages 282-297.
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Simon Robertson Stuart, Louise Tansey & Ethel Quayle. (2017) What we talk about when we talk about recovery: a systematic review and best-fit framework synthesis of qualitative literature. Journal of Mental Health 26:3, pages 291-304.
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Joy Kelly, Stephen Gallagher & Jennifer McMahon. (2017) Developing a recovery college: a preliminary exercise in establishing regional readiness and community needs. Journal of Mental Health 26:2, pages 150-155.
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Gavin Davidson, Lisa Brophy & Jim Campbell. (2016) Risk, Recovery and Capacity: Competing or Complementary Approaches to Mental Health Social Work. Australian Social Work 69:2, pages 158-168.
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Louise Byrne, Brenda Happell & Kerry Reid-Searl. (2015) Recovery as a Lived Experience Discipline: A Grounded Theory Study. Issues in Mental Health Nursing 36:12, pages 935-943.
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Sandra R. McNeil. Recovery, Identity, Resistance: Exploring Substance Use Stigma in Rural Ontario. Journal of Progressive Human Services 0:0, pages 1-28.
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Joy Llewellyn-Beardsley, Stefan Rennick-Egglestone, Felicity Callard, Kristian Pollock, Mike Slade & Alison Edgley. (2023) “Nothing's changed, baby”: How the mental health narratives of people with multiple and complex needs disrupt the recovery framework. SSM - Mental Health 3, pages 100221.
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Julia Knopes & Maia Dégale-Flanagan. (2023) Boundary Flexibilities in Mental Health Peer Support: The Peer Perspective. Journal of Psychosocial Rehabilitation and Mental Health.
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Tommy Lunde Sjåfjell & Knut Tore Sælør. (2023) «Det eneste sikre er at alt er usikkert.»Utforsking av recovery-orientert arbeid i et botilbud for personer med ROP-lidelser. Nordic Journal of Wellbeing and Sustainable Welfare Development 2:2, pages 37-52.
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Lore Bellaert, Clara De Ruysscher, Thomas F. Martinelli, Freya Vander Laenen, Deborah L. Sinclair & Wouter Vanderplasschen. (2023) The Ambiguous Nature of Contextual Dynamics During Drug Addiction Recovery: A Qualitative Study of Personal Narratives. Journal of Drug Issues, pages 002204262311793.
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Ed Kiely & Rosalie Warnock. (2022) The banality of state violence: Institutional neglect in austere local authorities. Critical Social Policy 43:2, pages 316-336.
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Dimitar Karadzhov. (2021) Personal recovery and socio-structural disadvantage: A critical conceptual review. Health: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine 27:2, pages 201-225.
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Ed Kiely. (2021) Stasis disguised as motion: Waiting, endurance and the camouflaging of austerity in mental health services. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 46:3, pages 717-731.
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Nicholas Marks. (2021) When the wheels come off: Actor‐network therapy for mental health recovery in the bicycle repair workshop. Sociology of Health & Illness 43:7, pages 1700-1719.
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Alison Faulkner. 2021. Voices in the History of Madness. Voices in the History of Madness 333 357 .
Erica Hua Fletcher & Adriane Barroso. (2020) “It's a much more relaxed atmosphere”: Atmospheres of recovery at a peer respite. Emotion, Space and Society 36, pages 100705.
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Tim Barlott, Lynda Shevellar, Merrill Turpin & Jenny Setchell. (2020) Destabilising social inclusion and recovery, and pursuing 'lines of flight' in the mental health sector. Sociology of Health & Illness 42:6, pages 1328-1343.
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Diana Rose. (2019) On personal epiphanies and collective knowledge in survivor research and action. Social Theory & Health 18:2, pages 110-122.
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Diana Rose. (2018) A hidden activism and its changing contemporary forms: Mental health service users / survivors mobilising. Journal of Social and Political Psychology 6:2, pages 728-744.
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Eva Brekke, Lars Lien, Kari Nysveen & Stian Biong. (2018) Dilemmas in recovery-oriented practice to support people with co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders: a qualitative study of staff experiences in Norway. International Journal of Mental Health Systems 12:1.
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Alain Topor, Tore Dag Bøe & Inger Beate Larsen. (2018) Small Things, Micro-Affirmations and Helpful Professionals Everyday Recovery-Orientated Practices According to Persons with Mental Health Problems. Community Mental Health Journal 54:8, pages 1212-1220.
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Skye Pamela Barbic, Sean A. Kidd, Zachary T. Durisko, Rosemary Yachouh, Gausiha Rathitharan & Kwame McKenzie. (2018) What Are the Personal Recovery Needs of Community-Dwelling Individuals with Mental Illness? Preliminary Findings from the Canadian Personal Recovery Outcome Measurement (C-PROM) Study. Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health 37:1, pages 29-47.
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