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Making the DSM-5 Concepts and Controversies

The biopolitics of defining ‘mental disorder.’

Publication ,  Chapter
Kinghorn, WA
May 17, 2013

Ten years later, despite some detailed conceptual work on the DSM-5 definition which was explicitly acknowledged and credited by the DSM-5 Task Force [28], there is no evidence that the DSM-5 definition has been any more influential in the ...

Duke Scholars

ISBN

9781461465041

Publication Date

May 17, 2013

Publisher

Springer Science & Business Media
 

Citation

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Kinghorn, W. A. (2013). The biopolitics of defining ‘mental disorder.’. In Making the DSM-5 Concepts and Controversies. Springer Science & Business Media.
Kinghorn, W. A. “The biopolitics of defining ‘mental disorder.’.” In Making the DSM-5 Concepts and Controversies. Springer Science & Business Media, 2013.
Kinghorn WA. The biopolitics of defining ‘mental disorder.’. In: Making the DSM-5 Concepts and Controversies. Springer Science & Business Media; 2013.
Kinghorn, W. A. “The biopolitics of defining ‘mental disorder.’.” Making the DSM-5 Concepts and Controversies, Springer Science & Business Media, 2013.
Kinghorn WA. The biopolitics of defining ‘mental disorder.’. Making the DSM-5 Concepts and Controversies. Springer Science & Business Media; 2013.
Journal cover image

ISBN

9781461465041

Publication Date

May 17, 2013

Publisher

Springer Science & Business Media