Literature DB >> 22385814

Addiction, agency, and the politics of self-control: doing harm reduction in a heroin users' group.

Teresa Gowan1, Sarah Whetstone, Tanja Andic.   

Abstract

Our 2007-2009 ethnography describes and analyses the practice of harm reduction in a heroin users' group in the midwestern United States. While dominant addiction interventions conceptualize the addict as powerless - either through moral or physical weakness - this group contested such "commonsense," treating illicit drug use as one of many ways that modern individuals attempt to "fill the void." Insisting on the destigmatization of addiction and the normalization of illicit drug use, the group helped its members work on incremental steps toward self-management. Although "Connection Points" had very limited resources to improve the lives of its members, our work suggests that the users' group did much to restore self-respect, rational subjectivity, and autonomy to a group historically represented as incapable of reason and self-control. As the users cohered as a community, they developed a critique of the oppressions suffered by "junkies," discussed their rights and entitlements, and even planned the occasional political action. Engaging with literature on the cultural construction of agency and responsibility, we consider, but ultimately complicate, the conceptualization of needle exchange as a "neoliberal" form of population management. Within the context of the United States' War on Drugs, the group's work on destigmatization, health education, and the practice of incremental control showed the potential for reassertions of social citizenship within highly marginal spaces.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22385814     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.11.045

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  9 in total

1.  The Significance of Harm Reduction as a Social and Health Care Intervention for Injecting Drug Users: An Exploratory Study of a Needle Exchange Program in Fresno, California.

Authors:  Kris Clarke; Debra Harris; John A Zweifler; Marc Lasher; Roger B Mortimer; Susan Hughes
Journal:  Soc Work Public Health       Date:  2016-05-11

2.  Expanding conceptualizations of harm reduction: results from a qualitative community-based participatory research study with people who inject drugs.

Authors:  L M Boucher; Z Marshall; A Martin; K Larose-Hébert; J V Flynn; C Lalonde; D Pineau; J Bigelow; T Rose; R Chase; R Boyd; M Tyndall; C Kendall
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2017-05-12

3.  Perspectives on rapid fentanyl test strips as a harm reduction practice among young adults who use drugs: a qualitative study.

Authors:  Jacqueline E Goldman; Katherine M Waye; Kobe A Periera; Maxwell S Krieger; Jesse L Yedinak; Brandon D L Marshall
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2019-01-08

4.  Control, power, and responsibility: a qualitative study of local perspectives on problem drinking in Peruvian Andean highlands.

Authors:  Sakiko Yamaguchi; Raphael Lencucha; Thomas G Brown
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2021-09-19       Impact factor: 4.185

5.  Organizational support for frontline harm reduction and systems navigation work among workers with living and lived experience: qualitative findings from British Columbia, Canada.

Authors:  A Greer; J A Buxton; B Pauly; V Bungay
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2021-06-05

6.  The Molecular Neurobiology of Twelve Steps Program & Fellowship: Connecting the Dots for Recovery.

Authors:  Kenneth Blum; Benjamin Thompson; Zsolt Demotrovics; John Femino; John Giordano; Marlene Oscar-Berman; Scott Teitelbaum; David E Smith; A Kennison Roy; Gozde Agan; James Fratantonio; Rajendra D Badgaiyan; Mark S Gold
Journal:  J Reward Defic Syndr       Date:  2015

7.  Results of a participatory needs assessment demonstrate an opportunity to involve people who use alcohol in drug user activism and harm reduction.

Authors:  Alexis Crabtree; Nicole Latham; Lorna Bird; Jane Buxton
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2016-12-09

8.  "They accept me, because I was one of them": formative qualitative research supporting the feasibility of peer-led outreach for people who use drugs in Dakar, Senegal.

Authors:  Camille May Stengel; Famara Mane; Andrew Guise; Magath Pouye; Monika Sigrist; Tim Rhodes
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2018-02-27

9.  "The Drug Use Unfortunately isn't all Bad": Chronic Disease Self-Management Complexity and Strategy Among Marginalized People Who Use Drugs.

Authors:  Lisa M Boucher; Esther S Shoemaker; Clare E Liddy; Lynne Leonard; Paul A MacPherson; Justin Presseau; Alana Martin; Dave Pineau; Christine Lalonde; Nic Diliso; Terry Lafleche; Michael Fitzgerald; Claire E Kendall
Journal:  Qual Health Res       Date:  2022-03-24
  9 in total

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