Coles

Loading Inventory...
Fighting Firewater Fictions: Moving Beyond the Disease Model of Alcoholism in First Nations

Fighting Firewater Fictions: Moving Beyond the Disease Model of Alcoholism in First Nations

By None

Current price: $92.00
Visit retailer's website
Fighting Firewater Fictions: Moving Beyond the Disease Model of Alcoholism in First Nations

Coles

Fighting Firewater Fictions: Moving Beyond the Disease Model of Alcoholism in First Nations

By None

Current price: $92.00
Loading Inventory...

Size: Hardcover

Visit retailer's website
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
In Fighting Firewater Fictions , Richard W. Thatcher describes and explains the emergence and perpetuation of the ''firewater complex'' – the cultural construct of an informally sanctioned, destructive, binge-drinking norm in First Nations reserve communities. The complex has reified alcoholism as an inevitability in the First Nations – an approach that has resulted in essential aspects of collective and personal responsibility being vacated in favour of therapeutic interventions assisted by social personnel of questionable expertise. This substitution has had the effect of relieving government policy-makers and reserve leadership from accountability for problematic community development strategies that have long since outgrown their support capacities. Thatcher argues that the conditions that give rise to extraordinary alcohol abuse rates in First Nations are largely traceable to the hopelessness associated with multi-generational unemployment. Fighting Firewater Fictions calls for community re-organization around a band development policy that looks beyond the reserve, and outlines a strategy that shifts the current, exclusive emphasis on the needs of alcoholics towards the neglected counselling and non-residential service needs of potential or actual binge-drinkers. This is essential reading for anybody working in, or seeking to understand, aboriginal communities that are experiencing problems with alcoholism.
In Fighting Firewater Fictions , Richard W. Thatcher describes and explains the emergence and perpetuation of the ''firewater complex'' – the cultural construct of an informally sanctioned, destructive, binge-drinking norm in First Nations reserve communities. The complex has reified alcoholism as an inevitability in the First Nations – an approach that has resulted in essential aspects of collective and personal responsibility being vacated in favour of therapeutic interventions assisted by social personnel of questionable expertise. This substitution has had the effect of relieving government policy-makers and reserve leadership from accountability for problematic community development strategies that have long since outgrown their support capacities. Thatcher argues that the conditions that give rise to extraordinary alcohol abuse rates in First Nations are largely traceable to the hopelessness associated with multi-generational unemployment. Fighting Firewater Fictions calls for community re-organization around a band development policy that looks beyond the reserve, and outlines a strategy that shifts the current, exclusive emphasis on the needs of alcoholics towards the neglected counselling and non-residential service needs of potential or actual binge-drinkers. This is essential reading for anybody working in, or seeking to understand, aboriginal communities that are experiencing problems with alcoholism.

More About Coles at Pine Centre

Shop Coles for bestselling books, toys, stationary, and so much more!

3079 Massey Dr, Prince George, BC V2N 1R4, Canada

Find Coles at Pine Centre in Prince George, BC

Visit Coles at Pine Centre in Prince George, BC
Powered by Adeptmind