About Me

Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom
Co-directors: Prof Gareth Williams, Dr Bob Smith, Prof Kevin Morgan, Dr Gabrielle Ivinson and Dr Gill Bristow - Research centre managers: Dr Dean Stroud (stroudda1@cf.ac.uk) and Dr Rebecca Edwards (edwardsrs1@cf.ac.uk) - 029 2087 6412 - Glamorgan Building, King Edward VII Avenue, Cardiff, Wales, CF10 3WA

Wednesday 9 January 2008

Mental Well-being and Happiness: Call for papers

ROYAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY / INSTITUTE OF BRITISH GEOGRAPHERS

ANNUAL CONFERENCE

27-29 AUGUST 2008, EDINBURGH

(www.rgs.org/ac2008)





CALL FOR PAPERS





Mental Well-being and Happiness





A lifetime of happiness! No man alive could bear it: it would be hell on
earth.

George Bernard Shaw, Man and Superman (1903), Act I



For the last 50 years Maslow's hierarchy of needs has underpinned
psychological understandings of achieving the ultimate in mental
well-being; to achieve self-actualisation. But new understandings of
well-being and happiness across the developed and developing worlds are
dismantling the hierarchy and challenging the way we conceive of mental
health.



Concerns with mental health have been dominated by a focus on deviations
from a 'norm' - particularly where this relates to stress and
psychological disorder. In contrast to traditional methods, more
recent understandings of mental health are extending beyond these
negative boundaries embracing emotions at the positive end of the
scale. Happiness, satisfaction with life or quality of life are merging
to provide more holistic measures of subjective well-being embracing the
complex relationships between the individual and their environment.



The spaces, and their potential to become places, that people inhabit
are important concepts for these new conceptualisations. They not only
facilitate our understanding of how the physical, cultural, and
political environment impact on health, but, importantly, provide the
framework for understanding how these external spaces are internalised
and give rise to the emotions that manifest as negative and positive
mental health states. In this session we wish to draw out this
discussion by considering how these complex relationships and processes
play out at the local and global level affecting mental illness, mental
health, psychological well-being and happiness.



To facilitate this debate on the changing and broadening concepts of
mental well-being, and consider the implications for geographic - the
importance of 'space' and 'place' -understandings of these phenomena, we
welcome papers along the broad questions of:



* What do we mean by mental health?
* Is mental health the same or different to happiness and
well-being?
* How do we measure these abstract concepts?
* Do space and place matter for mental well-being and happiness?
* What are the implications for public health and health policy in
developed and developing nations if the aim is to reduce suffering and
enhance well-being and happiness?



The deadline for abstracts (of around 200 words) is 8 February 2008.
If you have any questions please do not hesitate to get in touch.







Beverley Searle Chris Dunn

Research Fellow Senior Lecturer









Dr Beverley A Searle

Research Fellow

Department of Geography

University of Durham

South Road

Durham DH1 3LE



Telephone: 0191 334 1901

Fax: 0191 334 1801



Department of Goegraphy

http://www.dur.ac.uk/geography/





Pathways of Housing Wealth and Well-being

http://www.geography.dur.ac.uk/Clusters/Default.aspx?alias=www.geography
.dur.ac.uk/clusters/swsj





Social Well-being and Spatial Justice Cluster

http://www.geography.dur.ac.uk/Clusters/Default.aspx?alias=www.geography
.dur.ac.uk/clusters/swsj
y.dur.ac.uk/clusters/swsj>

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