1.
Appignanesi, Lisa. Mad, bad and sad: a history of women and the mind doctors from 1800 to the present. London: Virago; 2009.
2.
Barker, Philip J., Campbell, Peter, Davidson, Ben. From the ashes of experience: reflections on madness, survival and growth. London: Whurr; 1999.
3.
Basset, Thurstine, Stickley, Theo, MyiLibrary. Voices of experience: narratives of mental health survivors. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell; 2010.
4.
Barham, Peter, Hayward, Robert. Relocating madness: from the mental patient to the person. London: Free Association Books; 1995.
5.
Bates, Peter, Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health. Working for inclusion: making social inclusion a reality for people with severe mental health problems. Vol. Citizenship and community programme. London: Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health; 2002.
6.
Barnes, Marian, Bowl, Ric. Taking over the asylum: empowerment and mental health. Basingstoke: Palgrave; 2001.
7.
Bentall, Richard P. Doctoring the mind: why psychiatric treatments fail. London: Penguin; 2010.
8.
Bentall, Richard P. Madness explained: psychosis and human nature. London: Penguin; 2004.
9.
Boyle, Mary. Schizophrenia: a scientific delusion? 2nd ed. London: Routledge; 2002.
10.
Bracken, Patrick, Thomas, Philip. Postpsychiatry. Vol. International perspectives in philosophy and psychiatry. New York: Oxford University Press; 2005.
11.
Brooker, Charlie, Repper, Julie. Serious mental health problems in the community: policy, practice and research. London: Baillière Tindall; 1998.
12.
Campbell, J Stickley, T. & Bonney, S. Recovery as a framework for care planning. In: Care planning in mental health: promoting recovery. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing; 2008.
13.
Coleman, Ron. Recovery: an alien concept. 2nd ed. [S.l.]: P & P Press; 2004.
14.
Great Britain. National service framework for mental health: modern standards and service models. [London]: Dept. of Health; 1999.
15.
Chadwick, Peter K., Parker, Travis, Hammond, Terry. Schizophrenia: the positive perspective : explorations at the outer reaches of human experience. 2nd ed. Hove: Routledge; 2009.
16.
Dunn, Sara, Crawford, Lincoln, MIND (National Association for Mental Health). Creating accepting communities: report of the Mind Inquiry into social exclusion and mental health problems. London: Mind; 1999.
17.
Foucault, Michel, Howard, Richard, MyiLibrary. Madness and civilization: a history of insanity in the Age of Reason. Vol. Routledge classics. London: Routledge; 2001.
18.
Faulkner, A. Strategies for living. Mental health practice. 1(6).
19.
Morgan, Alastair. Being human: reflections on mental distress in society. Ross-on-Wye: PCCS Books; 2008.
20.
Miller, Peter M., Rose, Nikolas S. The power of psychiatry. Cambridge: Polity; 1986.
21.
Ingleby, David. Critical psychiatry: the politics of mental health. London: Free Association Books; 2004.
22.
Perkins, Rachel, Repper, Julie. Dilemmas in community mental health practice: choice or control? Oxford: Radcliffe Medical Press; 1998.
23.
Rapp, Charles A., Goscha, Richard J. The strengths model: case management with people with psychiatric disabilities. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press; 2006.
24.
Perkins, Rachel, Repper, Julie. Working alongside people with long term mental health problems. Cheltenham: Stanley Thornes; 1999.
25.
Read, Jim, Baker, Sue, MIND (National Association for Mental Health). Not just sticks & stones: a survey of the stigma, taboos and discrimination experienced by people with mental health problems. London: Mind; 1996.
26.
Repper, J. Adjusting the focus of mental health nursing: Incorporating users’ views on recovery. Journal of mental health. 2000;9(6).
27.
Read, Jim, Reynolds, Jill, Open University. Speaking our minds: an anthology of personal experiences of mental distress and its consequences. Vol. K257. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1996.
28.
Repper, Julie, Perkins, Rachel. Social inclusion and recovery: a model for mental health practice. Edinburgh: Baillière Tindall; 2003.
29.
Repper, Julie. Respect: time to end discrimination on mental health grounds : tall stories from the back yard : a survey of ‘nimby’ opposition to community mental health facilities, experienced by key service providers in England and Wales. London: Mind; 1997.
30.
Rogers, Anne, Pilgrim, David. Mental health and inequality. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2003.
31.
Rogers, Anne, Pilgrim, David. Mental health policy in Britain: a critical introduction. 2nd ed. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 2001.
32.
Romme, M. A. J., Escher, Sandra. Accepting voices. London: MIND Publications; 1993.
33.
Rose, Nikolas S. Politics of life itself: biomedicine, power, and subjectivity in the twenty-first century. Vol. In-formation series. Oxford: Princeton University Press; 2007.
34.
Sayce, Liz. From psychiatric patient to citizen: overcoming discrimination and social exclusion. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 2000.
35.
Mental Health and Social Exclusion.
36.
Romme, M. A. J., Escher, Sandra, MIND (National Association for Mental Health). Making sense of voices: the mental health professional’s guide to working with voice-hearers. London: Mind; 2000.
37.
Thornton, Tim. Essential philosophy of psychiatry. Vol. International perspectives in philosophy and psychiatry. New York: Oxford University Press; 2007.
38.
Stickley, Theo, Basset, Thurstine. Learning about mental health practice. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons; 2008.
39.
Warner, Richard. Recovery from schizophrenia: psychiatry and political economy. 3rd ed. Hove: Brunner-Routledge; 2004.
40.
Wilkinson, Richard G., Pickett, Kate. The spirit level: why equality is better for everyone. London: Penguin; 2010.
41.
Bentall, R. Madness explained: Why we must reject the Kraepelinian paradigm and replace it with a ‘complaint-orientated’ approach to understanding mental illness. Medical hypotheses. 2006;66(2).
42.
Bracken, P. & Thomas, P. Postpsychiatry: a new direction for mental health. BMJ : British medical journal / British Medical Association. 2001;322(7288).
43.
Bonney, S. & Stickley, T. Recovery and mental health nursing. Journal of psychiatric and mental health nursing. 1994;15(2).
44.
Calton T., Ferriter M., Huband N and Spandler H. A Systematic Review of the Soteria Paradigm for the Treatment of People Diagnosed With Schizophrenia. Schizophrenia bulletin / National Institute of Mental Health. 2008;34(1).
45.
Davidson L., Lawless M. & Leary F. Concepts of recovery: competing or complementary. Current opinion in psychiatry. 2005;18(6).
46.
Davidson L & Roe D. Recovery from versus recovery in serious mental illness: one strategy fro lessening confusion plaguing recovery. Journal of mental health. 2007;16(4).
47.
Lynch D., Laws KR & McKenna PJ. Cognitive behaviour therapy for major psychiatric disorder: does it really work? A meta-analytical review of well controlled trials. Psychological medicine. 2010;40(1).
48.
Davidson L. Recovery, self-management and the expert patient - changing the culture of mental health from a UK perspective. Journal of mental health. 2005;14(1).
49.
MacDonald AW and Schulz SC. What We Know: Findings That Every Theory of Schizophrenia Should Explain. Schizophrenia bulletin / National Institute of Mental Health. 2009;35(3).
50.
Morgan C. & Fisher H. Environment and schizophrenia: environmental factors in schizophrenia - a critical review. Schizophrenia bulletin / National Institute of Mental Health. 2007;33(1).
51.
Nelson B. and L A. Sass. Medusa’s Stare: A Case Study of Working With Self- Disturbance in the Early Phase of Schizophrenia. Clinical case studies. 2009;8(6).
52.
Snow N. & Austin WJ. Community treatment orders: the ethical balancing act in community mental health. Journal of psychiatric and mental health nursing. 2009;16(2).
53.
Spandler H. From Social Exclusion to Inclusion? A Critique of the Inclusion Imperative in Mental Health. Medical Sociology online. 2007;2(2).
54.
Stickley T. & Leng M. Residential rehabilitation and the modern agenda. Mental health practice. 2003;7(4).
55.
Tarrier N., Lewis S., Haddock R., Bentall R. et al. Cognitive-behavioural therapy in first-episode and early schizophrenia. The British journal of psychiatry. 2004;184.
56.
Stickley T. & Felton A. Therapeutic risk-taking. Mental health practice. 2006;9(8).
57.
Great Britain. No health without mental health: a cross-government mental health outcomes strategy for people of all ages. Norwich: TSO; 2011.
58.
Talking with acutely psychotic people: communication skills for nurses and others spending time with people who very mentally Ill.
59.
International experiences of using community treatment orders.
60.
Bob the Psychiatric Nurse.
61.
Centre for Mental Health.
62.
MIND.
63.
Department of Health.
64.
Mental Health Foundation.
65.
Hearing Voices Network.
66.
Rethink.
67.
Critical Psychiatry.
68.
National Mental Health Development Unit.
69.
National Forum for Assertive Outreach.