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This volume emphasizes the necessity for arts teachers to nurture
the personal development of their students by expanding their
artistic understanding and creativity. In aiming to provide a
broader understanding for the effective teaching of the arts, the
author provides powerful reasons for seeing the arts as agents of
learning, understanding and development. The volume also
demonstrates that whilst the arts are centrally concerned with
feeling, they are as fully open to objective reasoning as any other
subject discipline such as science, but the dichotomy between
'scientism' and 'subjectivism' is all-pervading in a curriculum
which marginalises the teaching of the arts.
Changing health-related behavior is for many people a lonely and
isolating experience. Individual willpower is often not enough,
particularly in addressing addictive behavior, but research
increasingly points to the potential of group identity to shape
behavior change and support recovery. This important collection
explores the social and cognitive processes that enable people who
join recovery groups to address their addictive issues. In an era
of increasing concern at the long-term costs of chronic ill-health,
the potential to leverage group identity to inspire resilience and
recovery offers a timely and practical response. The book examines
the theoretical foundations to a social identity approach in
addressing behavior change across a range of contexts, including
alcohol addiction, obesity and crime, while also examining topics
such as the use of online forums to foster recovery. It will be
essential reading for students, researchers and policy makers
across health psychology and social care, as well as anyone
interested in behavioral change and addiction recovery.
Changing health-related behavior is for many people a lonely and
isolating experience. Individual willpower is often not enough,
particularly in addressing addictive behavior, but research
increasingly points to the potential of group identity to shape
behavior change and support recovery. This important collection
explores the social and cognitive processes that enable people who
join recovery groups to address their addictive issues. In an era
of increasing concern at the long-term costs of chronic ill-health,
the potential to leverage group identity to inspire resilience and
recovery offers a timely and practical response. The book examines
the theoretical foundations to a social identity approach in
addressing behavior change across a range of contexts, including
alcohol addiction, obesity and crime, while also examining topics
such as the use of online forums to foster recovery. It will be
essential reading for students, researchers and policy makers
across health psychology and social care, as well as anyone
interested in behavioral change and addiction recovery.
Addiction and Recovery in the UK captures the essence of the
emerging addictions recovery movement and in particular the
emerging evidence base that had been gathered around the umbrella
of the Recovery Academy UK. The Recovery Academy was established
with the aim of creating a forum for people in recovery,
practitioners, commissioners and academics working together to
describe and understand the principles of recovery as applied
across the UK. Following the first annual conference, researchers
who had been involved in academic research on recovery and
innovative services and activities that had been evaluated were
invited to outline UK initiatives. This book, the result of their
contributions, is a vibrant collection of diverse theories and
models, critiques and innovations, ranging from two linked papers
describing the growing recovery movement in Edinburgh to a recovery
walking group in Wales and a model for peer activities in the North
of England. The projects are typically 'community up' projects
whose essence has been captured within this book, and which
together paint a picture of vitality and growth in the UK recovery
movement. This book was originally published as a special issue of
the Journal of Groups in Addiction and Recovery.
This volume emphasizes the necessity for arts teachers to
nurture the personal development of their students by expanding
their artistic understanding and creativity. In aiming to provide a
broader understanding for the effective teaching of the arts, the
author provides powerful reasons for seeing the arts as agents of
learning, understanding and development. The volume also
demonstrates that whilst the arts are centrally concerned with
feeling, they are as fully open to objective reasoning as any other
subject discipline such as science, but the dichotomy between
scientism and subjectivism is all-pervading in a curriculum which
marginalises the teaching of the arts.
Addiction and Recovery in the UK captures the essence of the
emerging addictions recovery movement and in particular the
emerging evidence base that had been gathered around the umbrella
of the Recovery Academy UK. The Recovery Academy was established
with the aim of creating a forum for people in recovery,
practitioners, commissioners and academics working together to
describe and understand the principles of recovery as applied
across the UK. Following the first annual conference, researchers
who had been involved in academic research on recovery and
innovative services and activities that had been evaluated were
invited to outline UK initiatives. This book, the result of their
contributions, is a vibrant collection of diverse theories and
models, critiques and innovations, ranging from two linked papers
describing the growing recovery movement in Edinburgh to a recovery
walking group in Wales and a model for peer activities in the North
of England. The projects are typically 'community up' projects
whose essence has been captured within this book, and which
together paint a picture of vitality and growth in the UK recovery
movement. This book was originally published as a special issue of
the Journal of Groups in Addiction and Recovery.
Available Open Access under CC-BY-NC licence. Putting forward a new
recovery roadmap and new reform models for prisoners reintegration,
Best provides an accessible guide for the implementation of
community partnerships for people in recovery from substance abuse
or rehabilitating from offending. Using case studies and a
strengths-based approach the book emphasizes the importance of
long-term recovery and the role that communities and peers play in
the process.
Although there is a strong and growing literature in the two areas
of desistance and addiction recovery, they have developed along
parallel pathways with little systematic assessment of the
empirical evidence about the co-occurrence of the relationship or
how one area can learn from the other. This book aims to fill that
gap by bringing together emerging literature on the relationship
between offending and substance use. Instead of focusing on the
active period of its onset and persistence, this book examines the
mechanisms that support desistance, addiction recovery, and the
common themes of reintegration and rehabilitation. With
contributions from a wide range of international experts in the
fields of desistance and addiction recovery, the book focuses on a
strengths-based, relational and community-focused approach to
long-term change in offending and drug-using populations, as well
as the shared barriers to effective reintegration for both. This
book will be highly informative for a wide audience, from academics
and students interested in studying desistance and recovery to
those working in addiction services and the criminal justice system
as well as policy makers and the people undertaking their own
journeys to desistance and recovery.
Although there is a strong and growing literature in the two areas
of desistance and addiction recovery, they have developed along
parallel pathways with little systematic assessment of the
empirical evidence about the co-occurrence of the relationship or
how one area can learn from the other. This book aims to fill that
gap by bringing together emerging literature on the relationship
between offending and substance use. Instead of focusing on the
active period of its onset and persistence, this book examines the
mechanisms that support desistance, addiction recovery, and the
common themes of reintegration and rehabilitation. With
contributions from a wide range of international experts in the
fields of desistance and addiction recovery, the book focuses on a
strengths-based, relational and community-focused approach to
long-term change in offending and drug-using populations, as well
as the shared barriers to effective reintegration for both. This
book will be highly informative for a wide audience, from academics
and students interested in studying desistance and recovery to
those working in addiction services and the criminal justice system
as well as policy makers and the people undertaking their own
journeys to desistance and recovery.
The issue of 'recovery' has been increasingly prioritised by
policymakers in recent years, but the meaning of the concept
remains ambiguous. This edited collection brings together the
thoughts and experiences of researchers, practitioners and service
users from the fields of health, addiction and criminal justice and
centres on current developments in addiction policy and practice.
Tackling Addiction examines what recovery, addiction and dependence
really mean, not only to the professional involved in
rehabilitation but also to each individual client, and how 'coerced
treatment' fails to take account of recovery as a long-term and
ongoing process. Chapters cover the influence of crime and public
health in UK drug policy; the ongoing emphasis on substitute
prescribing; the role of recovery groups and communities; and
gendered differences in the recovery process and implications for
responses aimed at supporting women. Tackling Addiction will be
essential reading for practitioners, researchers, policy makers and
students in the fields of addiction, social care, psychology and
criminal justice.
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