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Acknowledgments

This book is a collective project, and it would not exist without the longstanding generosity of colleagues and the support of friends. I owe my deepest debt to the staff and clients of the pseudonymous “Eastside Services.” Staff members allowed me to enter their tightly knit work group and share their frustrations and (rare) triumphs. They created a role for me—as friend, witness, and interested outsider—as they struggled to care for some of the most disenfranchised people in the United States. At the same time, individuals living with severe and disabling symptoms graciously accepted my intrusion into their lives. Their personal resilience and strategies for survival pushed me to rethink my personal and professional commitments. While writing this book, I have been honored to work alongside mental health advocates who self-identify as consumers, clinicians, activists, or all three. Their devotion to systemic reform is infectious, and I hope this book contributes to the changes that we all urgently need. In a book about the ethics of mental health care, I must scrupulously avoid identifying people even remotely connected to my research site. I thank them all, and I ask their forgiveness for any errors of fact or interpretation.

Long before beginning fieldwork, I benefitted from the guidance of many individuals. Robert (Skip) Nelson extended a warm mid-career welcome into bioethics. Carl Elliott, Tod Chambers, Ray DeVries, and Laurie Zoloth provided models of engagement and disciplinary self-awareness that helped me hone the fundamental questions about everyday ethics. Reaching further back, I owe my passion for this book to Arthur Kleinman, Byron Good, and Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good, the founders of the medical anthropology program at Harvard. Their mentorship and support over the years have been crucial to my professional growth. Steve Piker, now retired from Swarthmore College, laid the foundation for my career and provided my first model of humane anthropological scholarship.

Since completing fieldwork, my thinking has benefitted from a moveable conversation about anthropology, psychiatry, and social work. At the University of Chicago, Judy Farquhar and Summerson Carr have provided invaluable support, and they graciously invited me several times to present my work to their students. At the University of Paris, Livia Velpry and Anne Lovell shared their insights into the vexed worlds of consent, constraint, and community psychiatry, and I greatly appreciate their spirit of collaboration. Closer to home, my colleagues Kalman Applbaum and Michael Oldani invited me to join their research project on pharmaceutical compliance, and their ideas improved my analysis of this topic. Janelle Taylor, Erica Bornstein, and Richard Grinker offered useful suggestions and encouragement at various times during the long writing process. Sharon Kaufman's ideas and professional support also leave important traces on my own thinking.

The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee provided a congenial atmosphere for research and writing, and I would like to thank all my colleagues in the Department of Anthropology. Department Chairs Robert Jeske, Patrick Gray, and Thomas Malaby, along with Deans Richard Meadows and Rodney Swain, helped create opportunities for serious intellectual work, and I am in their debt. The support of the university's Center for 21st Century Studies was crucial early in this project. At the Medical College of Wisconsin, the opportunities for dialogue among humanities, social sciences, and medical practice have improved this book, and I am grateful for the friendship and administrative skills of Art Derse, David Seal (now at Tulane), and Julia Uihlein.

I thank Reed Malcolm and Stacy Eisenstark at the University of California Press for seeing promise in my manuscript and expertly shepherding the book to completion. Thanks also to Rebecca Lester and an anonymous peer reviewer who helped me clarify my main argument and make the book more accessible. I also thank the National Science Foundation, which funded my research (BCS-0522263). Cherie Sixbey, director of the Assertive Community Treatment Association, invited me to address numerous audiences of social workers and psychiatrists. I also thank the editors and peer reviewers of the journals that published previous versions of this research. Portions of Chapter Two appeared in “The Assemblage of Compliance in Psychiatric Case Management,” Anthropology and Medicine (UK) 2010, 17(2):129-143, as well as “Futility in the Practice of Community Psychiatry,” Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 2011, 25(2):189-208. Portions of Chapter Six appeared in “The Coproduction of Moral Discourse in U.S. Community Psychiatry,” Medical Anthropology Quarterly 2008, 22(2):127-147.

Finally, the difficulties of research and writing have been tempered by a small local network—a source of challenge, support, and inspiration. The patience and persistent inquiries of Tom Reed, Richard Frank, and the pseudonymous “Neil Hansen” have all found their way into this book. Most importantly, my deepest thanks to Huong DangVu, whose life work illuminates the contours of care and its human core.

Everyday Ethics

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