1st Edition

Perspectives on Person-Environment Interaction and Drug-Taking Behavior

Edited By Bernard Segal Copyright 1987
    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1987, Perspectives on Person-Environment Interaction and Drug-Taking Behavior provides a comprehensive overview of the interactionist approach from both a theoretical and applied perspective. Divided into five chapters, it deals with themes like psychosocial interactionism and substance use; social sanctions, self-referent responses, and the continuation of substance abuse; the interaction of child and environment in the early development of drug involvement; reconceptualization of person- environment interactions; and the disease theory of alcoholism from an interactionist perspective. This book is a must read for scholars and researchers of addiction studies, applied psychology and psychology in general.

    Preface 1. Psychosocial Interactionism and Substance Use S. W. Sadava 2. Social Sanctions, Self-Referent Responses, and the Continuation of Substance Abuse: A Person-Environment Interaction Perspective Howard B. Kaplan 3. The Interaction of Child and Environment in the Early Development of Drug Involvement: A Far Ranging Review and a Planned Very Early Intervention Robert A. Zucker and Robert B. Noll 4. Towards a Reconceptualization of Person- Environment Interactions: Applications to Research on Drinking Behavior Gerard J. Connors and Victor S. Alpher 5. The Disease Theory of Alcoholism from an Interactionist Perspective: The Consequences of Self-Delusion Stanton Peele

    Biography

    Bernard Segal