ABSTRACT Background Mental health peer work, in which people with lived experience of mental distress use their experience as a resource to help others, has evolved from early humane practices in Revolutionary‐era France to diverse contemporary models. There is evidence that peer workers enhance recovery outcomes, but challenges remain when integrating peer workers into professional mental health teams. Argument This debate essay argues that Philippe Pinel and Jean‐Baptiste Pussin's partnership in the 1790s and early 1800s foreshadowed elements of peer work, surveys the occupation's development through the anti‐psychiatry and consumer/survivor movements, and analyses how three political rationalities—neoliberalism, technocracy and democracy—frame peer work in Australia. Drawing on governmentality theory, the essay argues that under‐resourcing and market‐driven health policy can co‐opt peer interventions unless counterbalanced by technocratic safeguards (evidence‐based role delineation) and democratic commitments (person‐centred, strengths‐focused care). Conclusions To realise peer work's full potential, mental health services should formally recognise peer workers with independent reporting lines, embed rotations across multidisciplinary teams and secure sustainable funding (including Medicare reimbursement). These reforms would strengthen relational safety, reduce stigma and empower clients, ultimately fostering more humane, recovery‐oriented care.
Nicholas Haines (Wed,) studied this question.
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