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Dependence and Society (From Drugs and Drug Use in Society, P 73-83, 1994, Ross Coomber, ed. - See NCJ 159452)

NCJ Number
159459
Author(s)
R Room
Date Published
1994
Length
11 pages
Annotation
This paper examines the connections between sociocultural factors and alcohol dependence.
Abstract
The connections between sociocultural factors and alcohol dependence may be approached in several ways. Sociocultural factors can be treated as predictors and correlates extrinsic to dependence, viewed as a disease entity. The concept of dependence can be reexamined in terms of its presumed seating in the individual's psyche or body and expanded to include the possibility of seating at supraindividual sociocultural levels. And the idea of dependence can be reinterpreted as culture-bound, that is, as depending for its existence and meaningfulness on sociocultural characteristics specific to particular times and places. This paper focuses on the latter two approaches, with particular attention to the development of sociological constructionist thinking that views the concept and experiential reality of addiction or dependence as a product of particular cultural conditions rather than as a transcultural universal. References