Close
Lecture

​​Dr Chesmal Siriwardhana Memorial Lecture 2023

Teal background featuring text: LSHTM Event

​​The Chesmal Siriwardhana Memorial Lecture is held each year by the Centre for Global Mental Health in honour of our late colleague, whose research work focused on mental health and psychosocial support in humanitarian emergencies.

Headshot of Dr Siriwardhana

 

 

 

 

 

​The Centre for Global Mental Health are honoured to have Dr Lynne Jones speaking this year, to share her extensive experience and expertise in relation to children and adults in regions affected by conflict and other humanitarian emergencies.  

​​The Dr Chesmal Siriwardhana Memorial Lecture has been held each year since 2017 in honour of our colleague in the Centre for Global Mental Health who died tragically in a motor accident. Dr Siriwardhana’s work was in mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) in humanitarian emergencies, and each year we invite a distinguished expert to share their experience and research updates in this rapidly evolving field. 

Speaker

Dr Lynne Jones, Honorary Associate Professor, LSHTM

Headshot of Dr Lynne Jones

​We are honoured to have Dr Lynne Jones speaking this year. Dr Jones is a child and adolescent psychiatrist, writer, researcher, and relief worker. She has been engaged in running mental health services in disaster, conflict, and post-conflict settings around the world since 1990. Most recently she has been developing interventions to improve maternal and child mental and physical wellbeing in adverse environments, including Venezuela, Guatemala and with refugee families in Bosnia. Until August 2011, she was the senior technical advisor in mental health for International Medical Corps. 

Dr Jones is an Honourary Associate Professor at the Centre for Global Mental Health at LSHTM, course director for the program on Mental Health in Complex Emergencies at Fordham University, and consults to the World Health Organization, UNICEF and UNHCR. She has a PhD in social psychology and political science. In 2001, she was made an Officer of the British Empire (OBE) for her mental health work in conflict-affected areas of Central Europe. 

Admission

Admission
Free and open to all, online and in person. No registration required. A recording of this session will be available after the event on this page.

Contact