Event

Connecting with Migrant Children and their Families: What children in conflict and disasters have taught me

Tuesday, March 13, 2018toFriday, November 2, 2018
Institute of Community and Family Psychiatry, Jewish General Hospital, 4333 Cote Sainte-Catherine Road, Montreal, QC, H3T 1E4, CA

 

Institute of Community and Family Psychiatry, Jewish General Hospital

AMPHITHEATRE: 4333 Cote Sainte-Catherine Road

Montreal, Quebec, H3T 1E4

(Presentations will be in English)

Invited Speaker:

Lynne Jones, OBE, FRCPsych, PhD

 

Dr. Lynne Jones is a child and adolescent psychiatrist, writer, researcher, and relief worker. Jones has been engaged in assessing mental health needs and establishing and running mental health services in disaster, conflict, and post-conflict settings since 1990 around the world. Outside the Asylum: A Memoir of War, Disaster and Humanitarian Psychiatry, her latest book, published by Wiedenfeld and Nicolson (US publication June 2018), explores her experience as a practicing psychiatrist in war and disaster zones for 25 years, along with the changing world of international relief. With her colleague in international development, Luke Pye, Jones has co-created Migrant Child Storytelling, a website where migrant children can tell their stories through their own drawings, videos, and writing.

 

Until August of 2011, she was the senior technical advisor in mental health for International Medical Corps. She is a course director for the program on Mental Health in Complex Emergencies at the International Institute for Humanitarian Affairs, Fordham University, and consults to the World Health Organization. She was a member of ICD 11 stress disorders working group, and is a technical consultant in the development of the mhGAP curriculums by WHO and UNHCR. In October 2013 the new edition of her book, Then They Started Shooting: Children of the Bosnian War and the Adults They Become, was published by Bellevue Literary Press.

 

She has a PhD in social psychology and political science; she has also been a Radcliffe Fellow. In 2001, she was made an Officer of the British Empire (OBE) for her mental health work in conflict-affected areas of Central Europe. She is an honorary consultant at the Maudsley hospital, London, and Cornwall Partnership NHS Foundation trust; and is a visiting scientist at the François-Xavier Bagnoud Centre for Health and Human Rights, Harvard University. She is currently living and working in Belize.

 

For questions, please contact Anita Perrone by Email:aperrone [at] jgh.mcgill.ca

Department of Child Psychiatry (514) 340-8222 Ext. 25638

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