ABSTRACT

This provocative and controversial book challenges a number of widely held ideas in the alcohol/drug field by critically evaluating the bases of these ideas. The field of alcohol/drug studies is fraught with conflict and controversy, and each generation of researchers and practitioners seems to have its own special areas of conflict. In this new volume, experts focus on a number of important issues of current interest and controversy. Is alcoholism a “disease” or is it not? Should federal bans on drugs like heroin and cocaine be removed and will that solve, modify, or exacerbate the problem? Can the risk for alcoholism really be predicted?Professionals from a very wide variety of disciplines--medicine and biochemistry, psychiatry and psychology, philosophy, anthropology, law, social work, and journalism--present their very differing points of view on the perception of alcoholism as a disease and on public policy issues like proposed legislative controls over alcoholic beverages. Current Issues in Alcohol/Drug Studies touches upon a number of questions that will be of interest both to people in alcohol/drug research and in alcohol/drug treatment and prevention. Because it will undoubtedly stimulate further investigation and debate, researchers and policymakers will also find it useful.

chapter |28 pages

The Perils of Powell

In Search of a Factual Foundation for the “Disease Concept of Alcoholism”

chapter |40 pages

The Heritability of Alcoholism

Science and Social Policy

chapter |26 pages

Is Risk for Alcoholism Predictable?

A Probabilistic Approach to a Developmental Problem

chapter |20 pages

On Terms Used and Abused

The Concept of “Codependency”

chapter |10 pages

Adult Children of Alcoholics

Is It Really a Separate Field for Study?

chapter |26 pages

The New Temperance Movement

Through the Looking-Glass

part |1 pages

The Great Drug Debate

chapter |22 pages

Taking Drugs Seriously

chapter |7 pages

Don’t Legalize Drugs