Drug, Set, and Setting

WARNING

You are viewing an older version of the Yalebooks website. Please visit out new website with more updated information and a better user experience: https://www.yalebooks.com

The Basis for Controlled Intoxicant Use

Norman Zinberg

View Inside Format: Paper
Price: $29.00
YUP
Our shopping cart only supports Mozilla Firefox. Please ensure you're using that browser before attempting to purchase.

This discussion by a leading expert on drug use illuminates the factors that permit some people to use such highly addictive and dangerous substances as alcohol, marijuana, psychedelics, and opiates in a controlled fashion.

"This cogently written work should be of interest to members of the medical community, particularly those who have contact with substance abusers, psychiatrists, sociologists, policymakers, administrators, and interested laypersons. It is well worth reading."—Joseph Zentner, Journal of American Medical Association

"Extremely interesting, readable, and thought-provoking."—Library Journal

"This book is an important theoretical work that should be studied by everyone interested in the effects of psychoactive drugs and the ways in which individuals and society can learn to contain their potential for harm."—Andrew T. Weil, M.D., Journal of Psychoactive Drugs

"A wealth of information set in a new conceptual framework."—Booklist

"Norman Zinberg takes a refreshing approach to the correction of stereotyped notions about drugs and drug users. He has learned how the great majority of drug and alcohol users themselves minimize the hazards of intoxicants, and he has developed a theoretical framework for understanding what they do. By suggesting an alternative to punitive controls, he implies an alternative to public hysteria in the discussion of drug problems."—Lester Grinspoon, M.D.

"This cogently written work should be of interest to members of the medical community, particularly those who have contact with substance abusers, psychiatrists, sociologists, policymakers, administrators, and interested laypersons. It is well worth reading."—Joseph Zentner, Journal of American Medical Association

 

"Extremely interesting, readable, and thought-provoking."—Library Journal

 

"This book is an important theoretical work that should be studied by everyone interested in the effects of psychoactive drugs and the ways in which individuals and society can learn to contain their potential for harm."—Andrew T. Weil, M.D., Journal of Psychoactive Drugs

 

"A wealth of information set in a new conceptual framework."—Booklist
 

"Norman Zinberg takes a refreshing approach to the correction of stereotyped notions about drugs and drug users. He has learned how the great majority of drug and alcohol users themselves minimize the hazards of intoxicants, and he has developed a theoretical framework for understanding what they do. By suggesting an alternative to punitive controls, he implies an alternative to public hysteria in the discussion of drug problems."—Lester Grinspoon, M.D.

"A book of sound value, well and cautiously written, full of insights about activities that many decent people normally do not openly discuss—but which millions of them happily participate in. Norman Zinberg has provided us with a candid report by a pioneer from a largely unknown frontier: the reality of drug use in some of its most common features. By concentrating on the human dimensions of controlled use, he has etched in remarkably revealing detail the broad spectrum of use within which abuse may be better understood and more accurately defined."—Arnold S. Trebach, J.D., Ph.D., Director, Institute of Drugs, Crime and Justice, Professor, American University

"Zinberg has made an important contribution to the understanding of drug use by exploding myths with fact."—Howard S. Becker, MacArthur Professor of Arts and Sciences, Northwestern University

"This book is rich with information and insights emphasizing the cultural, social, and political systems that affect the definition and control of drug use."—American Journal of Psychiatry

"This cogently written work should be of interest to members of the medical community, particularly those who have contact with substance abusers, psychiatrists, sociologists, policymakers, administrators, and interested laypersons. It is well worth reading."—Joseph Zentner, Journal of the American Medical Association

"This enlightening and provocative book is generously broad in scope and appropriately integrated."—Vincent Nowlis, Contemporary Psychology
ISBN: 9780300036343
Publication Date: February 11, 1986
277 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4

Sales Restrictions: All rights reverted