The relationship between mental illness, deinstitutionalization, and homelessness.

 

Explain the relationship between mental illness, deinstitutionalization, and homelessness.

Sample Solution

The relationship between mental illness, deinstitutionalization, and homelessness

The sight of unkempt individuals, many suffering from apparent mental disorders, roaming the streets with nowhere to sleep and little to eat, is an enduring image of this century. Nowhere to Go is primarily an attack on the policy known as deinstitutionalization. Homelessness is touted as evidence of the failure of this policy. Although homelessness among the chronically ill is closely linked with deinstitutionalization, it is not the result of deinstitutionalization per se but of the way deinstitutionalization has been carried out. The lack of planning for structured living arrangements and for adequate treatment and rehabilitative services in the community has led to many unforeseen consequences such as homelessness, the tendency for many chronic patients to become drifters, and the shunting of many of the mentally ill into the criminal justice system.

towards the profitable American Institution. One stance on the Lincoln debate is that Lincoln was a hero and the ‘Great Emancipator’, the contrasting view is that Lincoln was simply a white racist. As a solution to the problem of slavery Lincoln was strongly in favour of the policy of Colonisation, which involved moving free African Americans to North-West Africa instead of their remaining in the United States. Lincoln was not the ‘Great Emancipator’ that many have argued; his role in the emancipation of slaves in America is clearly very crucial, but the legislation emerges as a military tactic to win the Civil War and keep America united under the control of the Union. Therefore he receives too much credit for being the sole guarantor for granting the freedom of America’s slaves.

Lincoln emerged as a prominent politician in the state of Illinois in the 1830s; during the earlier years he often described himself as an ‘occasional critic of slavery.’ In the year 1854 Lincoln expressed his feelings towards the institution of slavery, stating that he could not contemplate the political and social equality of blacks – this was due to his intense belief in the Declaration of Independence, framed by Thomas Jefferson and ratified in 1776. The Declaration ‘allowed one man to govern another man, without that other’s consent’ but it did not mention that white and black Americans had political and civil equality. Historian Eric Foner has used this argument of the Declaration of Independence as to why Lincoln opposed slavery, saying that it was due to the violation of republican beliefs and principles. The 1850s marked a more open approach by Lincoln in his views on slavery, he now began to describe a slave worker as being denied the reward for their own labour, which was theft. Lincoln believed that slavery was morally wrong, but it was too imbedded as an institution into the American mindset, especially that of the southerners, that changing this idea through political policies, for example the abolitionism movement, was too problematic and unstable to force onto society. The Southern states were agriculturally orientated and their entire system of economic wealth was based on slave labour, the Northern states on the other hand had began to abolish slavery after the American Revolution 1775-1783, but racism still remained a prominent undertone within society. Tensions surrounding slavery and race reached a peak with the Dred Scott v. Sandford case in 1857; Dred Scott was a slave that had sued for his and his family’s freedom after they had been taken to a state where slavery was illegal. The outcome of the case was determined by Chief Justice Roger Taney who made slavery legal in all territories, this essentially rendered the Missouri Compromise of 1820 useless and the US was now a slave nation in its entirety. Taney was strongly of the opinion that African Americans were an inferior race, and he thought that court rulings would h

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