Postgraduate students working on topics linked to the Mirror Project
completed
Aamina Ali: (2020) Psychological stress and coping in adolescent Muslim New Zealanders: A key informant perspective.
Nasier, B. (2019). ‘PM me’: Young people’s perceptions of supportive versus unsympathetic responses to distress online.
Herald, R. (2019). How I got here: Personal narratives of youth mental health difficulties and recovery.
Stubbing, J. (2017). Young people’s perspectives on the reasons for youth suicide in New Zealand.
Knight, K. (2017). Young people and the therapeutic relationship.
Lei, Y. (2016). A qualitative exploration of stress, coping, support-seeking, and help-seeking among Chinese migrant youth in New Zealand.
Edwards, E. (2016). We are all in the same boat: Views and experiences of stress, coping and help-seeking among New Zealand youth.
Wang, T. (2015) Young people’s experiences of assessment in a mental health setting.
Campbell, J. (2014). I think I am what I am because of that phone call: Young people talk about their experience of telephone counselling.
Kerrisk, K. (2014). Narrative, Identity, and Meaning Making: Young People’s Experiences of Psychotherapy.
Wills, C. (2015). 'A hard pill to swallow': Young women's experiences of taking antidepressants.
Aamina Ali (2015). Reasons young people feel suicidal: A thematic analysis of posts to an internet suicide helpline.
Underway
Bilal Nasier: Exploring the Responses of
Muslim Youth to the Christchurch Terrorist Attacks.
Lizzy Fisher: The experience of volunteers providing crisis intervention to young people through
social media.
Emily Adeane: The impact of online help seeking on offline help seeking for youth.
Shauney Thompson: Pasifika youth narratives
of negotiating positive mental health within a digital context.
Clare Stanton: Parents caring for a young person at risk of suicide
Hannah Swinton: Young people's experiences
of having a sibling who has engaged in problematic substance use.
Jessica Stubbing: What do young people want from mental health services in New Zealand.
Jeanne Van Wyk: Asking for help with suicidality through text counselling.