Classic Text No. 133: 'Maxwell Jones and the Therapeutic Community', by David Millard (1996)

Craig Fees*, David Kennard

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

This text was David Millard's departing gift to a field to which he had contributed for 30 years, as practitioner and later as Lecturer in Applied Social Studies and editor of the International Journal of Therapeutic Communities. Charting the chronology of Maxwell Jones's career as a world-renowned psychiatrist and therapeutic community pioneer, Millard contrasts Jones's contribution at Mill Hill with Tom Main's at Northfield. Jones's most distinctive contribution was allowing patients to become auxiliary therapists and freeing nurses from the nursing hierarchy. Focusing on a subset of therapeutic communities in adult psychiatry, Millard's paper is not an academic history of therapeutic communities as such. The roles of happenstance and positive deviance are demonstrated in the way change occurs in therapeutic communities. The 'charisma question' is briefly explored.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)78-86
Number of pages9
JournalHistory of Psychiatry
Volume34
Issue number1
Early online date30 Dec 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2023

Keywords

  • Maxwell Jones
  • Mill Hill
  • Northfield
  • therapeutic community
  • Tom Main
  • Classic Text No. 133

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