Community care and its antecedents, Peter Bartlett and David Wright; "not simple boarding" - care of the mentally incapacitated in Scotland during the long 18th century, R.A.B. Houston; at home with perpetual mania - the domestic treatment of the insanity of childbirth in the 19th century, Hilary Marland; family, community and the lunatic in mid-19th-century North Wales, David Hirst and Pamela Michael; boarding-out insane patients - the significance of the Scottish system 1857-1913, Harriet Sturdy and William Parry-Jones; enclosing and disclosing lunatics in the family walls -domestic psychiatric regime and the public sphere in early 19th-century England, Akihito Suzuki; lunatic and criminal alliances in 19th-century Ireland, Oonagh Walsh; families, communities and the legal regulation of lunacy in Victorian England - assesments of crime, violence and welfare in admissions to the Devon Asylum, 1845-1914, Jo Melling et al; community care and mental deficiency, Jan Walmsley et al; rhetoric and reality - community care in England and Wales, 1948-74, John Welshman; mental health policy, care in the community and political conflict - the case of the integrated service in Northern Ireland, Jim Campbell; outside the walls of the asylum? psychiatric treatments in the 1980s and 1990s, Sarah Payne.