Scott Yates
De Montfort University
28 Papers
115 Citations
Scott Yates is an academic researcher from De Montfort University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Mental illness. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 25 publications.
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Papers
Not so NEET? A Critique of the Use of ‘NEET’ in Setting Targets for Interventions with Young People
Scott Yates,Malcolm Payne +1 more
TL;DR: The authors argue that NEET is a problematic concept that defines young people by what they are not, and subsumes under a negatively-perceived label a heterogeneous mix of young people whose varied situations and difficulties are not conceptualised.
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Early Occupational Aspirations and Fractured Transitions: A Study of Entry into ‘NEET’ Status in the UK
TL;DR: This article found that young people with uncertain occupational aspirations or ones misaligned with their educational expectations are considerably more likely to become NEET by age 18, and that uncertainty and misalignment are both more widespread and more detrimental for those from poorer backgrounds.
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Stigma in relation to families living with parental mental illness: An integrative review
Andrea Reupert,Brenda Gladstone,Rochelle Hine,Scott Yates,Violette E. McGaw,Grant Charles,Louisa M Drost,Kim Foster +7 more
TL;DR: Public health policies and campaigns that focus exclusively on promoting open disclosure of mental illness to foster community education outcomes are unlikely to be effective without additional strategies aimed at preventing and redressing the structural impacts of stigma for all family members.
Towards a critical ontology of ourselves? Foucault, subjectivity and discourse analysis,
Scott Yates,David Hiles +1 more
TL;DR: This paper argued that Foucault's work can productively be understood as a series of analyses comprising a tripartite critical ontology with significant concerns for subjectivity and individual conduct.
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Beyond normalization and impairment: theorizing subjectivity in learning difficulties – theory and practice
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors draw on the work of Foucault to deconstruct normalization and social role valorization, arguing that they reproduce a common but problematic individual-society dualism.
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