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This paper presents a history of the emergence and development of the antipsychiatry movement in Great Britain in the 1960s. It contains a brief history of the origins and main ideas of anti-psychiatry, its reforming concepts and initiatives that sought to achieve reformed approaches to therapy and its theoretical and practical consequences. The anti-psychiatry is presented here as a revolutionary idea seeking to change the system of care extended to those with mental disorders. The British anti-psychiatry was founded by representatives of the medical science, a group formed around R.D. Laing and David Cooper, and it was supposed to be an opposition against institutionalised, coercive psychiatry and psychiatric diagnosis. Although it remained a part of psychiatry, it was also a phenomenon linked closely to changes ongoing in its era, especially with the emerging counter-culture. Its significance lies in the way it inspired new reflections on the conceptualisation of mental illness, as well as changes in diagnostic model and therapeutic practice of its time.  
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