TY - JOUR
T1 - Cross-cultural Comparison of Recovery College Implementation Between Japan and England
T2 - Corpus-based Discourse Analysis
AU - Kotera, Yasuhiro
AU - Miyamoto, Yuki
AU - Vilar-Lluch, Sara
AU - Aizawa, Ikuya
AU - Reilly, Owen
AU - Miwa, Akihiro
AU - Murakami, Michio
AU - Stergiopoulos, Vicky
AU - Kroon, Hans
AU - Giles, Kirsty
AU - Garner, Kennedyrae
AU - Ronaldson, Amy
AU - McPhilbin, Merly
AU - Jebara, Tesnime
AU - Takhi, Simran
AU - Repper, Julie
AU - Meddings, Sara
AU - Jepps, Jessica
AU - Simpson, Adelabu Jonathan
AU - Kellermann, Vanessa
AU - Arakawa, Naoko
AU - Henderson, Claire
AU - Slade, Mike
AU - Eguchi, Shigeyuki
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/7/5
Y1 - 2024/7/5
N2 - Recovery Colleges (RCs) are mental health learning communities, operated in 28 countries across cultures. However, the RC operational model is informed by Western countries sharing similar cultural characteristics such as individualism and short-term orientation. How RC operational model needs to be adapted to non-Western culture remains unknown. We investigated how RCs are introduced to the public in two countries with contrasting cultural characteristics: Japan (collectivism, long-term) and England (individualism, short-term). Corpus-based discourse analysis on 22,827 words from promotional texts (13 RCs in Japan, 61 in England) revealed that both countries emphasised mental illness lived experiences. In Japan, the focus was on the relational and long-term aspects of recovery. In England, the focus was on personal learning and skill acquisition. People attending RCs in Japan may anticipate experiencing collectivistic and long-term elements, which are viewed unfavourably in the operational model. Findings suggest refinements to the operational model to include under-represented cultural characteristics.
AB - Recovery Colleges (RCs) are mental health learning communities, operated in 28 countries across cultures. However, the RC operational model is informed by Western countries sharing similar cultural characteristics such as individualism and short-term orientation. How RC operational model needs to be adapted to non-Western culture remains unknown. We investigated how RCs are introduced to the public in two countries with contrasting cultural characteristics: Japan (collectivism, long-term) and England (individualism, short-term). Corpus-based discourse analysis on 22,827 words from promotional texts (13 RCs in Japan, 61 in England) revealed that both countries emphasised mental illness lived experiences. In Japan, the focus was on the relational and long-term aspects of recovery. In England, the focus was on personal learning and skill acquisition. People attending RCs in Japan may anticipate experiencing collectivistic and long-term elements, which are viewed unfavourably in the operational model. Findings suggest refinements to the operational model to include under-represented cultural characteristics.
KW - Corpus-based discourse analysis
KW - Cross-culture
KW - England
KW - Japan
KW - Mental health recovery
KW - Recovery College
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85197496552&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11469-024-01356-3
DO - 10.1007/s11469-024-01356-3
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85197496552
SN - 1557-1874
JO - International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction
JF - International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction
ER -