Abstract
For more than 20 years, the Soviet Union has been charged with confining political and religious dissidents in psychiatric hospitals for other than medical reasons. The repressive use of psychiatric hospitalization has been primarily associated with the maximum security “special hospitals,” operated by the Ministry of Internal Affairs, to which dissidents have been committed after being found mentally nonresponsible for political crimes. In 1977, the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) condemned the Soviet Union for such abuses, and six years later the Soviet All-Union Society of Neuropathologists and Psychiatrists resigned from the WPA rather than face almost certain expulsion. Soviet psychiatric officials repeatedly denied these charges of political abuse and refused to permit international bodies or psychiatrists from other countries to see the patients and psychiatric hospitals in question.In the spring of 1989, however, the Soviet government allowed an official delegation of psychiatrists and forensic experts from the United States to interview patients, selected by the delegation, in whose cases hospitalization was believed to have been politically motivated.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference32 articles.
1. 13. R.S.F.S.R. Code of Criminal Procedure, Chapter 33, Proceedings for the Application of Compulsory Measures of a Medical Nature, Articles 403–413.
2. 3. Commentary on the Report “Assessment of Recent Changes in Soviet Psychiatry” prepared by the U.S. Delegation on the Results of Its Visit to the U.S.S.R. (Translation by U.S. Department of State)(Hereinafter “Soviet Response”).
3. 2.3. International conference on auroral physics
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