Traditionally, men's mental health woes have been attributed to male stubbornness and rigid notions of masculinity. However, there is growing recognition that mental health issues in men are socially determined by a range of factors including family, educational, occupational, and legal issues. These and a variety of other social issues have been collectively labelled �men's issues' and are being increasingly linked to negative men's mental health outcomes. This book gives an overview of men's mental health as well as related men's issues, adopting a public-health-inspired approach examining the research linking social exposures and mental health outcomes. This unique book synthesizes and explores men's issues, men's mental health, and social determinants in a holistic and integrated manner through assessment of the social scientific and psychiatric literature. The author discusses social determinants of men's mental health and accompanying psychosocial interventions, moving beyond one-dimensional discussions of masculinity. Topics include: The Social Determinants of Male Suicide; Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Young Males; Why Do Men Have Low Rates of Formal Mental Health Service Utilization?; The Gender Gap in Education: Understanding Educational Underachievement in Young Males and its Relationship to Adverse Mental Health; and Employment, Unemployment and Workplace Issues in Relation to Men's Mental Health. This volume is essential reading for healthcare practitioners and social service providers including psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, occupational therapists, counsellors, teachers, charity workers, health promotion specialists, and public health officers. It is a useful text for graduate and advanced undergraduate students in health care, social services, public health, epidemiology and social sciences, particularly sociology, psychology, and gender studies. Accessible for intelligent lay readers and the wider public.