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Written by Alfred Lindesmith
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Friday, 15 January 2010 00:00 |
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Addiction and Opiates
Alfred R. Lindesmith
CONTENTS
PREFACE
PART I The Nature of the Opiate Habit Chapter 1 Method and Problem Chapter 2 The Effects of Opiates Chapter 3 Habituation and Addiction Chapter 4 The Nature of Addiction Chapter 5 Processes in Addiction Chapter 6 Cure and Relapse Chapter 7 A Critique of Current Views of Addiction Chapter 8 Conclusions, Implications, Problems
PART II opiate Addiction as a Social Problem (Except for minor editorial changes, the next four chapters are reproduced as they appeared in the original edition in 1947. Chapter 13 provides a postscript summarizing the nature of the problem in 1969.) Chapter 9 The Problem in the United States during the Nineteenth Century Chapter 10 Federal Anti-Narcotics Legislation Chapter 11 The Effects of World War II Chapter 12 Needed Reforms Chapter 13 Postscript - 1968
APPENDIX KINDS OF DRUGS AND METHODS OF USE
PREFACE
This revision of my 1947 book, Opiate Addiction, has been prompted primarily by continued interest in and debate concerning the theory of addiction that was elaborated in it. The first part of the book, which represents a theoretical discussion of the social psychology of opiate addiction, has been extensively revised to incorporate new evidence and arguments, to make the theoretical position more clear, and to take negative criticism into account. The second part deals with the social problem of addiction and is relatively brief. Because I have analyzed the policy and problem aspects of addiction in some detail in my 1965 book, the Addict and the Law, I have simply reproduced my 1947 analysis with only a very few minor editorial changes and a brief postscript. The bibliography and the glossary of the addict's argot have been expanded and updated.
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Last Updated on Sunday, 20 February 2011 22:01 |