Tackling Problem Drug Use: A New Conceptual Framework moreJournal of Social Work in Mental Health (The Haworth Social Work Practice Press, an imprint of The Haworth Press, Inc.) Vol. 2, No. 2/3, 2004, pp. 117-138;
Successful ‘recovery’ from long-term problem drug use has depended largely upon understanding and tackling the physiological and psychological nature of drug dependence; however, drawing upon research and practice in Liverpool, England, the author questions whether this discourse is sufficient given the changing nature, context and attitudes towards drug consumption in the twenty-first century. This article emphasises the importance of incorporating structural and social factors. Drawing upon qualitative data from three separate studies, the author illustrates how stigmatisation, marginalisation, and social exclusion are significant debilitating components that have tended to be overlooked. This paper contributes new insights into the damaging impact of political rhetoric and structural discrimination that has placed many long-term drug users vulnerable to relapse. In response to these findings the author offers a new conceptual framework for practice that incorporates and pro-motes an understanding of the social nature and context of long-term drug dependence.
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Criminal Justice, Criminology, Drugs And Addiction, Sociology of Crime and Deviance, Social Sciences, Social Work, Addiction, Sociology, Sociology Of Deviance, Drugs and drug culture, Substance Abuse Treatment, Social Policy, Social Psychology, Addiction Relapse Prevention, Addiction (Psychology), Drugs And Alcohol, History of Alcohol and Drug Use, Drug Use and Prohibition (Anthropology), Drug abuse and addiction, Targeted Drug Delivery, and Addiction and Recovery