Privatization and Psychoanalysis: the Impact of Neo-liberalism on Freud's Tool of Social Justice

Graybow, S.; Eighmey, J.; Fader, S.

Journal of Psychohistory 42(4): 280-294

2015


ISSN/ISBN: 0145-3378
PMID: 26211328
Document Number: 684498
The paper outlines the historical links between psychoanalysis, social progressivism and the political Left. It then details the process by which those links were undone such that today psychoanalysis and mental health services in general are alienated from their radical roots. The paper posits this process of alienation is continued today via the neo-liberal phenomenon of privatization, which has profound implications for clients seeking mental health treatment especially those of minority status or who are economically oppressed. Today, access to effective mental health treatment is linked to one's economic status, and people of all class backgrounds seem less likely to receive mental health interventions that promote awareness of the oppressive political and economic forces they face. The paper includes two clinical vignettes illustrating the inequalities that are inherent to the privatized mental healthcare system. The paper calls for a return to the ideals and practices of the progressive psychoanalysis that defined the inter-war era of the last century.

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