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Welcome to the website for the International Society for Psychological and Social Approaches to Psychosis - US Chapter (ISPS-US)'s 2026 Conference, Psychosis and the Social Link

The event will take place from November 6-8th, 2026, at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City and hybrid online via Zoom.

  • Friday, November 6th: Pre-conference activities (TBA)
  • Saturday, November 7th - Sunday November 8th: Full conference
  • Call for Proposals Portal: Deadline June 1st, 2026

Theme

Psychosis is overwhelmingly understood by dominant mental health systems as a problem of the individual: a disease, deficit, or disorder, to be treated by medication and, less frequently, psychotherapy. An enhanced way of approaching psychosis is not merely to conceptualize it as something that exists solely within a person, but as something that emerges in relationship with the social link.  

In the aftermath of World War II, a group of French psychiatrists reconceptualized psychosis (or “madness”) as most importantly a social phenomenon, rooted in experiences of intensive social alienation. This movement considered psychotherapeutic treatment to be, foremost, a process of “disalienation”: the undoing of profound social disconnection through community and social engagement. Individual treatment was thus integrated with social treatment, aimed at healing both the individuals within a therapeutic community and the community itself.

ISPS-US’s landmark 25th Annual Conference seeks to re-engage with this thinking as we face a resurgence of policies and practices that further entrench states of alienation, including the expansion of civil psychiatric commitment, and a broader social context in which many, particularly those most affected by racial and economic inequities, displacement, or homelessness, are pushed further to the margins. Appreciation of the social determinants of psychological suffering leads us to an essential question: Rather than being incomprehensible, is psychosis, in fact, an expression of society’s fractures?

New York City serves as a powerful setting for grappling with these questions. As a city of over 8 million people with immense diversity, New York is paradoxically a very social place, and also one of potentially profound social isolation. Many come because their “home” was untenable due to war, disaster, oppression, or simply not fitting in. Therefore, to be a New Yorker is often to be an outsider, bound with other New Yorkers by difference and the attempt to find one’s footing in community. In this way, New York serves as a metaphor for understanding psychosis and the social link – not only as an individual experience, but as something that unfolds within the tensions of connection, disconnection, and the search for belonging.

ISPS-US seeks papers from service providers, researchers, people with lived experience, family members, and advocates broadly connected to the theme of psychosis and the social, including:

  • Peer support as social connection
  • Psychoanalytic perspectives on psychosis and the social link
  • Supported employment, education, and meaningful occupation
  • Art, creativity, and community
  • Lived experience perspectives on psychosis
  • Alternatives to hospitalization
  • Stigma and alienation
  • The family system and psychosis
  • History and the intergenerational transmission of trauma
  • Socio-cultural dimensions
  • Structural oppression and violence as incubators of ongoing intergenerational distress
  • Any other topics inspired by the conference theme

The conference will be hybrid; you may attend and present either online or in person. However, there are limited virtual spaces. Scholarships will be available on a first-come, first-served basis for those without the means to attend otherwise.

See you in New York City in November 2026!

Submit Your Proposal 
Deadline June 1st, 2026


Attestation: John Jay College educates fierce advocates for justice, a calling that demands robust debate, rigorous inquiry, and respectful dissent. Consistent with this commitment, we support academic freedom and convene conversations reflecting multiple perspectives. The views expressed at events held at John Jay belong to the speaker(s) and do not represent the opinion of the college.
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