Juan Mezzich - Books Written By Juan Mezzich

Books Written By Juan Mezzich

  • Psychiatry and Sexual Health: An Integrative Approach (2006)
  • Philosophical & Methodological Bases of Psychiatric Diagnosis
  • Comprehensive Health & Integration of Services: New York & International Perspectives
  • Guía Latinoamericana de Diagnóstico Psiquiátrico (GLADP) (APAL, 2004)
  • Personality Disorders (2004)
  • WPA International Guidelines for Diagnostic Assessment (IGDA) (2003)
  • International Classification and Diagnosis: Critical Experience and Future Directions (2002)
  • Cultural Psychiatry: International Perspectives (2001)
  • The City and Mental Health (2000), Culture and Psychiatric Diagnosis: A DSM-IV Perspective (1996)
  • Psychiatric Diagnosis: A World Perspective (1995)
  • Psychiatric Epidemiology (1994)
  • The 1986-1987 initial evaluation summary report (1988)

Read more about this topic:  Juan Mezzich

Famous quotes containing the words books, written and/or juan:

    The books may say that nine-month-olds crawl, say their first words, and are afraid of strangers. Your exuberantly concrete and special nine-month-old hasn’t read them. She may be walking already, not saying a word and smiling gleefully at every stranger she sees. . . . You can support her best by helping her learn what she’s trying to learn, not what the books say a typical child ought to be learning.
    Amy Laura Dombro (20th century)

    The prostitute is the scapegoat for everyone’s sins, and few people care whether she is justly treated or not. Good people have spent thousands of pounds in efforts to reform her, poets have written about her, essayists and orators have made her the subject of some of their most striking rhetoric; perhaps no class of people has been so much abused, and alternatively sentimentalized over as prostitutes have been but one thing they have never yet had, and that is simple legal justice.
    —Alison Neilans. “Justice for the Prostitute—Lady Astor’s Bill,” Equal Rights (September 19, 1925)

    Is that the Craig Jurgesen that Teddy Roosevelt gave you?... And you used it at San Juan Hill defending liberty. Now you want to destroy it.
    Laurence Stallings (1894–1968)