The Concept of Addiction: Opiate Addiction in the United States
andthe Western World Divergent Evidence about Narcotic
AddictionNonbiological Factors in Addiction The Nature of
Addiction.
The American Image of Alcohol: Does Liquor Have the Power toCorrupt
and Control?: The Disease of Alcoholism Historical, Social,Ethnic,
and Economic Factors in Alcoholism in the United States TheSocial
Science Challenge to Disease Theory Controlled-DrinkingTherapy for
Alcoholism.
Theories of Addiction: Stanton Peele and Bruce K. Alexander
GeneticTheories Exposure Theories: Biological Models Exposure
Theories:Conditioning Models Adaptation Theories The Requirements
of aSuccessful Theory of Addiction.
Adult, Infant, and Animal Addiction: Bruce K. Alexander,
StantonPeele, Patricia F. Hadaway, Stanley J. Morse, Archie
Brodsky, andBarry L. Beyerstein.
Addiction to an Experience: Elements of the Addictive
ExperienceSusceptibility to Addiction and the Choice of Addictive
Object:Social and Cultural Factors Susceptibility to and Choice
ofAddiction: Situational Factors Susceptibiltity to and Choice
ofAddiction: Individual Factors Susceptibility to and Choice
ofAddiction: Developmental Factors The Nature of Addiction:
TheAddiction Cycle.
The Impaired Society: The Narcotic Connection--Supply and DemandThe
Negative Effects of the Belief in Chemical Dependence Can WeTreat
Away the Drug Problem? The Alcoholism and Chemical
DependenceIndustry Spreading Diseases The Cure for Addiction.
STANTON PEELE, a leading figure in the addictions field, has won the Mark Keller award from the Rutgers Center Alcohol Studies and the Lindesmith Award from the Drug Policy Foundation. He is the author of the classic Love and Addiction and The Truth About Addiction and Recovery.
"A tour de force, a spectacular effort of research
andunderstanding. This book gives us the courage to bypass
diseasenotions to deal with intrapsychic, family system, and social
andcultural dynamics in addiction." (David Cook, Counseling
andPsychological Services, University of Wisconsin)
"The Meaning of Addiction presented a new paradigm of addiction.The
field has since become more open to the kind of complex,contextual
view of addiction and compulsive behavior that itpresents.
Nonetheless, it remains the classic source for expressingthis point
of view." (Archie Brodsky, Department of Psychiatry,Harvard Medical
School)
"Peele's theory of 'addiction as an experience' in The Meaning
ofAddiction remains a pathbreaking one that offers readers
anaccessible and empowering understanding of their own
experiences,desires, and addictions. For understanding addictions,
Peele is inmy view (and for my courses on this subject) still the
source ofall sources." (Richard J. DeGrandpre, Department of
Psychology, St.Michael's College, Burlington, Vermon)
"Stanton Peele's books have been instrumental in helping
meunderstand my own underlying causes of addiction and how,
howeverwell-intentioned the 12-step model is, it led me to focus on
thewrong aspects of addiction." (Marianne Gilliam, author,
HowAlcoholics Anonymous Failed Me)
"Offers a thought-provoking, insightful, and
controversialperspective on the etiology of addictive behaviors.
Peelechallenges the biological model and provides an
importantalternative view on addictive behaviors. The Meaning of
Addictionshould be required reading for students and professionals
alike."(Kim Fromme, Department of Psychology, University of
Texas)
"Given the extraordinary, but largely unsubstantiated,
confidencethat many in both the public an professional ranks have
insimplistic conceptualizations of addictive behavior, it
isreassuring that sophisticated and provocative alternatives such
asthose proposed by Stanton Peele in The Meaning of Addiction
surfacefrom time to time. It offers hope for constructive change
byputting reason an choice back into the addiction formula." (Alan
R.Lang, Department of Psychology, Florida State University)
"This is a book to be read slowly, to be taken seriously, and to
bedebated hotly by every professional in the field. This
wholesubject is one of the major medical political and society
problemsof our civilization, and we seem unable to find any
workablesolution." (John A. Owen, Jr., M.D., Professor of
InternalMedicine, University of Virginia School of Medicine)
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