Addiction Treatment is an ethnography that compares two types of
residential drug-free treatment programs--religious, faith-based
programs and science-based, secular programs. Although these
programs have originated from significantly different ideological
bases, in examining the day-to-day operations of each, Daniel E.
Hood concludes that they are far more alike than they are
different.
Drug-free treatment today, whether in secular or religious form,
is little more than a remnant of the temperance movement. It is a
warning to stop using drugs. At its best, treatment provides
practical advice and support for complete abstinence. At its worst,
it demeans users for a form of behavior that is not well understood
and threatens death if they do not stop. Hood argues that there is
no universal agreement on what addiction is and that drug abuse is
little more than a catch-all term of no specific meaning used to
condemn behavior that is socially unacceptable.
Through extensive participatory observations, intimate life
history interviews, and informal conversations with residents and
staff, Hood shows how both programs use the same basic techniques
of ideological persuasion (mutual witnessing), methods of social
control (discourse deprivation), and the same proposed zero
tolerance, abstinent lifestyle (Christian living vs. Right living)
as they endeavor to transform clients from addicts to citizens or
from sinners to disciples.
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