Comprehending Drug Use, the first full-length critical overview of the use of ethnographic methods in drug research, synthesizes more than one hundred years of study on the human encounter with psychotropic drugs. J. Bryan Page and Merrill Singer create a comprehensive examination of the whole field of drug ethnography-methodology that involves access to the hidden world of drug users, the social spaces they frequent, and the larger structural forces that help construct their worlds. They explore the important intersections of drug ethnography with globalization, criminalization, public health (including the HIV/AIDS epidemic, hepatitis, and other diseases), and gender, and also provide a practical guide of the methods and career paths of ethnographers.
"Insightful and illuminating, this book successfully discusses drugs in social contexts.
Drugs: Your Questions Answered
Starting, Switching, Slowing and Stopping: Report for the Drugs Prevention Initiative Integrated Programme
Drug Trying and Drug Use Across Adolescence: A Longitudinal Study of Young People's Drug Taking in Two Regions of Northern...
Drugs Futures: Changing Patterns of Drug Use Amongst English Youth
Thomas McGuane has made Panama a high-wire act of extravagant emotion and steel-nerved prose.
Those are tough decisions, especially when they are decisions about drugs. In this book, you'll practice making decisions and explaining your decisions to your friends. Have you ever wanted to "Say No" to drugs, but wondered how to say it?
With the threat so close to home, he must do whatever it takes to protect the girl he’s always loved—no matter the risk. *Due to harsh language, violence, drug use, and sexual situations, this book is recommended for 17+.
Written with encyclopedic scope, this candid, sober, hard-hitting history of the global drug trade takes the reader back five centuries to the origins of the modern narcotics industry in the Western world. Reprint. 10,000 first printing.
Programme de prévention primaire des toxicomanies auprès des jeunes