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Conference Details
Creating Sanctuary: Safe Spaces to Share Taboo Experiences with Jacqui Dillon
Claiming Safe Spaces: Healing and Social Change through Intentional Peer Relationships with Lisa Archibald & Liz Brosnan
Keeping Nature in Mind for Better Mental Health with Michaela McDaid
Insights around Safe Spaces from Within and Outside the Mental Health System with Dr. Bryan McElroy
The Drayton Park Model: Drayton Park Women’s Crisis House and Resource Centre with Shirley McNicholas
Art Making v Schizophrenia: Channelling the Latent Power of Magical Thinking with Molly May O’Leary
The Price of ‘Safety’? Ambivalence in Mental Health Service User Interview Accounts of Involuntary Hospitalisation (‘Sectioning’) in England with Konstantina Poursanidou and Jill Hemmington
A Beacon for Medication Free Treatment - Background and Experiences with Ole Andreas Underland & Siv Helen Rydheim
Sanctuary within Ourselves with Feargus Callagy
An Evaluation of a Training Seminar on Domestic Violence Advocacy Intervention for Staff in an Approved Centre in Ireland with Aidan Cooney
A Collaborative Peer Led Approach to Creating Open Safe Spaces with Sharon Ferguson, Noreen McLaughlin & Marie Duffy
Co-creating Safe Spaces in Mental Health Systems with Jackie Furlong, Maria Burke & Patricia Barret
A Right of Conscientious Objection to Forced ‘Treatment’ with Dr. Jonathan Gadsby and Prof. Mick McKeown
Creating an Asylum of Ideas: The Work of Asylum Magazine in Creating a Space for Service Users with Dr. Sonia Soans
No safe space: A personal perspective on why medicalising human distress further traumatises people, families and communities with Jennifer Hough
Plenary: Towards Safe Spaces
Harry Gijbels

Harry Gijbels is a retired mental health nurse and academic with over 40 years of experience in challenging mental health practices and education. He continues to be actively engaged, for example through his work with the Hearing Voices Network Ireland. Harry’s work in activism is informed and influenced by issues of power, human rights and social justice in mental health.

Lydia Sapouna

Lydia Sapouna is a Lecturer in the School of Applied Social Studies, University College Cork, Ireland. Her teaching, research and community contributions are primarily in the area of critical mental health, education and practice. She is very interested in the politics of mental health and the role of social activism in changing power imbalances in mental health systems.

Jacqui Dillon

Jacqui Dillon is an activist, author, and speaker, and has lectured and published worldwide on trauma, abuse, hearing voices, psychosis, dissociation, and healing. She is a key figure in the international Hearing Voices Movement, has co-edited three books, published numerous articles and papers and is on the editorial board of the journal Psychosis: Psychological, Social and Integrative Approaches. Jacqui is Honorary Lecturer in Clinical Psychology at the University of East London, Visiting Research Fellow at The Centre for Community Mental Health, Birmingham City University and a member of the Advisory Board, The Collaborating Centre for Values-Based Practice in Health and Social Care, St Catherine’s College, Oxford University. Jacqui’s survival of childhood abuse and subsequent experiences of using psychiatric services inform her work, and she is an outspoken advocate and campaigner for trauma informed approaches to madness and distress. Jacqui is part of a collective voice demanding a radical shift in the way we understand and respond to experiences currently defined as psychiatric illnesses. In 2017, Jacqui was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Psychology by the University of East London.

Liz Brosnan

Having spent years on the ‘outside’ as a service user, then exploring recovery and involvement work, progressing into academia, trying to make change happen on the edges of mental health systems, Liz is now working on the ‘inside’ in the heart of services to see what can be achieved with good allies. In a cv spanning decades, she has worked with many incredible people to bring service-user/survivor/persons with psychosocial disabilities/Mad voices out of the margins into the mainstream. She has worked in many arenas: local community activism, peer advocacy, user-led/survivor research, academic writing and publishing, training and education, disability rights research. Returning to work in HSE MHS mental health engagement, she is optimistic that Intentional Peer relationships, will allow us to create safe spaces within and without statutory services.

Konstantina (Dina) Poursanidou, PhD.

Konstantina (Dina) is an independent Service User Researcher in mental health. Her doctoral and post-doctoral research has spanned a range of fields including mental health, education, child health, youth justice and social policy/social welfare. She has worked in a number of Universities in England as a Service User Researcher and held a 3-year Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Patient and Public Involvement and Improvement/Implementation Science at the Service User Research Enterprise in the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London. She is a member of Asylum, the radical mental health magazine editorial group, as well as one of the directors of the UK-based Survivor Researcher Network Community Interest Company.

Testimonials: Live Attendees

Ann Fitzpatrick

This event practices the 'social' of social work with, and not 'on' people sas a values-driven activity undertaken uffering mental and human distress. It clearly situates the democratisation of relationships and power between people experiencing distress and the state, workers, family, loved ones involved as an essential value and element of those relationships. The event is explicit in its values and practice of demonstrating and seeking democratic care as a basic human right. That is rare and it is so hopeful. It reflects the dynamic, yet critical perspectives which the event and its organisers continually work to uphold.

Bryan McElroy

This is a remarkable conference that allows vital perspectives in mental health to be shared. The depth of understanding of the speakers is very obvious and the event is super well organized.

Claire McCarthy

This conference was a wonderful experience that had speakers from diverse backgrounds share their stories. I felt truly privileged to be part of that today. Thank you.

Emma Johnson

A thought provoking event that service users, students, and professionals in humanity can gain insights and reflect on while supporting themselves and others in our complex messy world.

Shauna O'Dwyer

My experience of the conference was invaluable. There was such a variation of knowledge, experience and expertise. The conference was extremely well organised, and so relevant to the discourses in society today in regards to mental health. As a first year social work master's student, it proved beneficial to me in my awareness of others experiences and also the areas that need to be challenged. It is us the next generation that will need to ask the difficult questions, and advocate for a more humanistic approach to mental health services and challenges. Overall 5 stars. I thoroughly enjoyed it and will relay back to it throughout my career.