Jan Schneider
Drug Treatment and Ethnicity
A Comparative Study in the Metropolitan Areas of Frankfurt, Tel Aviv and San Francisco
EUR 29,90
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Lieferzeit (D): 2-3 Werktage
Buchreihe: Forschung Psychosozial
Verlag: Psychosozial-Verlag
289 Seiten, Broschur, 148 x 210 mm
ISBN-13: 978-3-8980-6079-0, Bestell-Nr.: 1079
Die interkulturelle Öffnung der sozialen Dienste ist in den letzten
Jahren zu einem wichtigen Thema geworden. Diese komparative Studie
beschreibt in einer systematischen Gegenüberstellung, wie die
Gesellschaften Deutschlands, Israels und der USA auf den
Hilfebedarf drogenmissbrauchender ethnischer Minderheiten
reagieren. Anhand von empirischen Fallstudien werden Modelle
herausgearbeitet, mit denen sich Einrichtungen und Mitarbeiter der
psychosozialen Dienste einer multikulturellen Klientel öffnen
können.
Developing multicultural competencies within the social services
has become a continuous issue in recent years. This comparative
study, by means of a systematic juxtaposition, illuminates the ways
in which the German, Israeli and American societies react to the
needs of substance-abusing ethnic minority groups. On the basis of
empirical case studies the author elaborates paradigmatic models,
which psychosocial service institutions and professionals apply to
increase their relevancy with regard to a multicultural
clientele.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
[ einblenden ]
Inhalt
1. Introductory Chapter: Immigration and ethnic minorites in
Germany, Israel and the United States – political and societal
concepts and realities
1.1 GERMANY
1.1.1 Germany as a de facto immigration country
1.1.2 The multicultural city of Frankfurt am Main
1.2 ISRAEL
1.2.1 The melting pot maintained: Immigration and absorption of
Jews and differentiation of other ethnic minorities
1.2.2 City of cultural diversity: Tel Aviv/Jaffo
1.3 UNITED STATES
1.3.1 The United States as an immigrant society
1.3.2 San Francisco: Minorities as a majority
2. Idiosyncrasies in three Western Countries: drug history, drug
treatment systems and prevalence of illicit substance
use
2.1 GERMANY
2.1.1 Prevalence of illicit substance use – a West German
phenomenon?
2.1.2 From abstinence-dogmatism to experimental harm-reduction:
Evolution of the drug treatment system
2.2 ISRAEL
2.2.1 The Jewish »sober ethos« to fade? – Prevalence of Illicit
Drug Use in Israel
2.2.2 The Israeli Drug Treatment System: A Unique and Recent
History
2.2.2.1 The situation prior to 1989
2.2.2.2 Installation of the Anti Drug Authority
2.2.2.3 Development of a treatment system
2.3 UNITED STATES
2.3.1 Prevalence of drug use in the U.S. - an upward or downward
trend?
2.3.2 The Summer of Love, the Drug Scares and Beyond: Evolution of
Drug Scenes and the Drug Treatment System in the U.S.
2.4 Comparative conclusions
3. Substance abuse among ethnic minorities – prevelance,
distribution and patterns
3.1 Germany
3.2 Israel
3.3 United States
4. Roadblocks and other barriers: What prevents ethnic minorities
from entering drug abuse treatment in Germany?
4.1 Under-utilization of mainstream services
4.2 Identified barriers to accessing treatment for ethnic minority
groups
4.3 Outpatient drug services and ethnicity in Frankfurt am Main
4.3.1 Options for outpatient treatment and service utilization
4.3.2 From low-threshold service into counseling?
5. Access to drug treatment for ethnic minorities in Israel
5.1 A national perspective
5.2 Outpatient drug treatment in Tel Aviv/Jaffo: Empirical
observations
5.2.1 The treatment providers’ point of view
5.2.2 The clients’ point of view
6. Ethnic and cultural sensitivity in outpatient drug abuse
services in the United States: a case study
6.1 Ethnic groups and drug treatment in San Francisco
6.2 A philosophy from the 60s – suitable for the 90s? Case study of
the Haight Ashbury Free Clinics’ outpatient substance abuse
services
6.2.1 History and evolution
6.2.2 Current realities
7. Towards multicultural competencies in outpatient substance abuse
services: discussion and results from a transnational
perspective
7.1 Inhibiting factors in politics and society
7.2 Concluding considerations for organizational development