Studies in Social Justice (Oct 2024)
British Columbia’s Mental Health System: Addressing Systemic Human Rights Issues
Abstract
In British Columbia (BC), Canada, mental health reforms over the last decade have moved back and forth between calls for practices that restrict human rights and those that are rooted in equity and social justice. In this article, we explore some of these tensions and their implications for human rights and equity in mental health care by critically analyzing three policies guiding mental health reform in BC using an intersectionality-based policy framework. Specifically, we interrogate the effects of a biomedical and individualized framing of mental health and substance use. We argue that such a framing is buttressed by neoliberal ideology and lays the groundwork for public and professional acceptance of coercive practices with particular consequences for Indigenous and racialized populations. This framing is juxtaposed with a holistic wellness and trauma-informed policy framework anchored by an understanding of the impact of colonization. However, what is missing in both policy framings is a full account of the documented ongoing human rights violations experienced by many people accessing BC’s mental health system. Our analysis shows how applying an intersectionality-based policy framework allows for a deeper exploration of the complex, interlocking systems of power and oppression that give rise to these human rights violations. We conclude with a discussion of the important role that decolonizing and intersectional approaches play for capturing the complexities of systemic inequities and advancing mental healthcare that protects and promotes mental wellbeing and human rights.
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