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The Globalization of Addiction

The Globalization of Addiction

A Study in Poverty of the Spirit

9780199588718
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Description
The Globalization of Addiction presents a radical rethink about the nature of addiction. Scientific medicine has failed when it comes to addiction. There are no reliable methods to cure it, prevent it, or take the pain out of it. There is no durable consensus on what addiction is, what causes it, or what should be done about it. Meanwhile, it continues to increase around the world. This book argues that the cause of this failure to control addiction is that the conventional wisdom of the 19th and 20th centuries focused too single-mindedly on the afflicted individual addict.Although addiction obviously manifests itself in individual cases, its prevalence differs dramatically between societies. For example, it can be quite rare in a society for centuries, and then become common when a tribal culture is destroyed or a highly developed civilization collapses. When addictionbecomes commonplace in a society, people become addicted not only to alcohol and drugs, but to a thousand other destructive pursuits:: money, power, dysfunctional relationships, or video games. A social perspective on addiction does not deny individual differences in vulnerability to addiction, but it removes them from the foreground of attention, because social determinants are more powerful. This book shows that the social circumstances that spread addiction in a conquered tribe or a falling civilisation are also built into todays globalizing free-market society. A free-market society is magnificently productive, but it subjects people to irresistible pressures towards individualism and competition, tearing rich and poor alike from the close social and spiritual ties that normally constitute human life. People adapt to their dislocation by finding the best substitutes for asustaining social and spiritual life that they can, and addiction serves this function all too well. The book argues that the most effective response to a growing addiction problem is a social and political one, rather than an individual one. Such a solution would not put the doctors, psychologists, social workers, policemen, and priests out of work, but it would incorporate their practices in a larger social project. The project is to reshape society with enough force and imagination to enable people to find social integration and meaning in everyday life. Then great numbers of them would notneed to fill their inner void with addictions.
Product Details
OUP Oxford
85308
9780199588718
9780199588718

Data sheet

Publication date
2010
Issue number
1
Cover
paperback
Pages count
496
Dimensions (mm)
155 x 233
Weight (g)
718
  • Part I - Roots of Addiction in Free-market Society; Vancouver as prototype; Addiction1, Addiction2, Addiction3, Addiction4; The dislocation theory of addiction; Psychosocial integration is a necessity; Free-market society undermines psychosocial integration; Addiction is a way of adapting to dislocation (1) - historical evidence; Addiction is a way of adapting to dislocation (2) - quantitative research, clinical reports and spam; Addiction is a way of adapting to dislocation (3) - the myth of the demon drugs; Part II - The Interaction of Addiction and Society; Addiction and society; The role of addiction in the civilised madness of the 21st century; Getting by; Spiritual treatment for addiction: the fifth pillar; Socrates Master passions and Dikaiosune; From blindness and paralysis to action; Social actions to control addiction: question period;
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