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Substances, Welfare, and Social Relations

Breaking Stigma, Pursuing Hope

Amber Gazso

$64.99

Paperback

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English
University of Toronto Press
26 February 2024
Substances, Welfare, and Social Relations uses intimate, complex portraits to tell the stories of people who have lived some part of their life course while using or recovering from using substances (such as alcohol or illicit or prescription drugs) and also being part of a family and experiencing poverties.

Through these multifaceted stories, layered with a critical analysis of welfare policy, the book probes the deeply entrenched stigma of living with addiction and in low income. Amber Gazso's work revolves around the three-principles idea that (1) addiction is part of everyday life; (2) if we believe that people are not their addictions, then stigmatizing addiction has no place in society; and (3) destigmatizing addiction and providing better, more imaginative programs and services invites and supports actionable hope. Reflecting on qualitative data, both narrative interviews and policy discourse, Substances, Welfare, and Social Relations illuminates how stigmas can be overturned through a collective praxis of hope.
By:  
Imprint:   University of Toronto Press
Country of Publication:   Canada
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 23mm
Weight:   420g
ISBN:   9781487547530
ISBN 10:   1487547536
Pages:   304
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Primary ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Acknowledgments 1. Introduction   Part I: Contextualizing and Embedding Experience 2. Situating the Study of Substances, Welfare, and Social Relations 3. Knowing Addiction   Part II: Lives as Lived 4. Becoming a Substance User 5. Being an Object of Welfare 6. Being a User, Sober, or in Recovery on Welfare 7. Being Part of Families and Social Support Relationships 8. Beginning Anew, and Recovery Part III: Destigmatization, Hope, and Potential for Change 9. Supporting Substance Users on Welfare: Of Hope among Us Index

Amber Gazso is an associate professor of sociology at York University.

Reviews for Substances, Welfare, and Social Relations: Breaking Stigma, Pursuing Hope

"""Substances, Welfare, and Social Relations makes an important contribution to scholarship in a very accessible manner, about what it is like to be labelled as having an addiction while simultaneously being on social assistance. It offers a close-up view, through the eyes of a researcher, of what it is like to be an object as well as the subject of social policy and welfare practices that attempt to control, activate, constrain, and discipline recipients. This book is a pleasure to read.""--Sue-Ann MacDonald, Associate Professor in the School of Social Work, Université de Montréal ""This high-quality piece of scholarship is well written, well referenced, and timely. Amber Gazso clearly knows the field and has a demonstrated commitment to advancing knowledge while evidencing a deep respect for her research participants. Her work is effectively framed in her statement of her own positionality and her methods are well and carefully articulated and epistemologically grounded.""--Lea Caragata, Director and Associate Professor in the School of Social Work, University of British Columbia ""In the escalating opioid crisis, Gazso offers a must-read book - for health and social practitioners, caseworkers, policymakers, and people everywhere touched by substance use and addiction - that invites us to see the immeasurable capacity and possibility of others when we apply a collective praxis of hope. Skillfully weaving together the stories of people living with addiction who are accessing social assistance benefits in Ontario today, Gazso presents rich and detailed data on research participants' past and present experiences of gender-based violence and victimization, trauma and suffering, pain and abuse.""--Tracy Smith-Carrier, Associate Professor of Humanitarian Studies and Canada Research Chair, Advancing the UN Sustainable Development Goals, Royal Roads University"


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