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Application deadline: March 20, 2025
Mental health and human rights are closely intertwined. Mental well-being is linked to peace and equity, yet marginalized individuals are often blamed for their struggles. Critical global mental health and global public health have recognized the urgent need to analyze and intervene in the political determinants and antecedents of cogent global challenges of our contemporaneity. More recently, critical global mental health and global public health have recognized the urgent need to analyze and intervene in the political determinants and antecedents of cogent global challenges of our contemporaneity including war and structural violence.
The Summer Schools Global Mental Health and Human Rights: Decolonial perspectives on Structural Violence and War aims at strengthening knowledge to foster a psychology of liberation that provide theoretical and practical participatory tools to enable the adaptation and control of indigenous and self-determined models to understand mental health in low and middle-income countries and societies undergoing or coming to terms with political turbulence, war, and social upheaval.
Suitable for: PhD students and practitioners working in mental health, international relations, law, gender and race studies, social work, education, psychology, psychiatry, environmental and climate studies, political science, public health, nursing, global health, and mental health. The school is also open to activist individuals and groups, policy and decision-makers, NGOs and CBOs, stakeholders and influencers seeking to strengthen their knowledge and know-how on global mental health, human rights, and allied disciplines.
For further information visit our website or send an email to summerschools@univiu.org
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