用Honneth识别正在康复的瘾君子:介入酒精和其他毒品领域的污名化语言辩论

IF 1.3 Q4 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Drugs, habits and social policy Pub Date : 2023-08-07 DOI:10.1108/dhs-05-2023-0019
I. Walmsley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文的目的是评估建议以个人第一语言取代身份第一语言对作为康复计划一部分的自我认同为康复成瘾者的影响。麻醉品匿名(NA)将用来说明背景性质的恢复成瘾身份。设计/方法/途径为了论证康复成瘾者身份和社会关系在戒毒中的价值,本文借鉴了阿克塞尔·霍尼特的互认和自我形成理论。寻找以人为本的语言忽略了身份第一语言在12步康复中的重要性。这种疏忽与减少耻辱的逻辑有关,这种逻辑排除了所有关联的身份优先语言,而不是根据具体情况评估这些术语的影响。本文运用Honneth的理论来说明戒毒过程中戒毒者的身份认同是如何通过相互认知的关系来促进自信和自尊的。研究局限/意义该论点排除了那些认为自己正在康复的瘾君子,但不参加12步戒瘾小组的人。需要进一步的研究来了解使用个人第一语言而不是身份第一语言的建议对其他康复社区和途径的影响。实际影响用个人第一语言取代身份第一语言的建议可能会导致12步奖学金在更广泛的学术、政策和实践领域被边缘化。当12步治疗小组及其成员进入更广泛的康复领域时,他们喜欢的术语被视为侮辱和不人道,语言偏好可能成为一个有争议的问题。原创性/价值据作者所知,这是第一篇提出减少耻辱感的替代理论框架,以判断酒精和毒品领域的道德适当语言的文章。
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Recognising the recovering addict with Honneth: an intervention into the stigmatising language debate in the alcohol and other drugs field
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to assess the impact of the recommendation to replace identity-first language with person-first language on people who self-identify as recovering addicts as part of a recovery programme. Narcotics Anonymous (NA) will be used to illustrate the contextualised nature of the recovering addict identity. Design/methodology/approach To demonstrate the value of the recovering addict identity and social relations in NA, this paper draws on Axel Honneth’s theory of mutual recognition and self-formation. Findings Person-first language overlooks the significance of identity-first language to people in 12-step recovery. This oversight is linked to the logic of stigma reduction which excludes all identity-first language by association rather than assessing the impact of such terms on a case-by-case basis. Honneth’s theory is used to show how the recovering addict identity facilitates self-confidence and self-esteem through relations of mutual recognition in NA. Research limitations/implications The argument excludes people who identify as recovering addicts, but do not attend 12-step groups. Further research would be needed to understand how the recommendation to use person-first language instead of identity-first language impacts upon other recovery communities and pathways. Practical implications The recommendation to replace identity-first language with person-first language might result in 12-step fellowships becoming marginalised within the broader academic and policy and practice arena. Language preferences can become a contentious issue when 12-step groups and their members enter the wider recovery arena where their preferred terminology is viewed as stigmatising and dehumanising. Originality/value To the best of the author’s knowledge, this is the first article to propose an alternative theoretical framework to stigma reduction for judging morally appropriate language in the alcohol and drugs field.
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