According to the findings of this study, college women do not
typically use drugs simply for the sake of taking drugs. Drug use
was viewed as a part of relationships, and for some of these women,
a very important part. Within their relationships, these women
socially constructed drugs in traditional (i.e., using discourses
of morality, legality, and health/personal safety) ways. They also
tended to arrange drugs hierarchically--they created what the
author labels an individualized drug acceptability ranking that
helped them determine their drug using limits.
This study suggests that the decisions to use drugs are more
complicated than previous literature has suggested. Studies
attempting to find correlations between college student drug use,
personality traits of drug abusers, gender differences, racial
differences, parental influences and educational influences
continue to dominate the literature on college student drug use.
This book provides a starting point and an invitation to listen to
more voices to determine other factors that influence one's drug
using decisions.
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