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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Patterns of African American Addiction, July 17, 2002
By 
Stephen L. Johnson (Seattle, WA United States) - See all my reviews
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Doing Drugs; Patterns of African American Addiction is a text that comes right out of the battle fields of drug treatment.

The authors, a preacher and a college professor seem familar with their subject. My favorite chapters are on the history of African American addiction. A loty of times we think addiction just happened in the sixities and miss that their is a history of addiction that is mixed up with racial opression as well as the urbanization of African American people.

New information for me was the African American drinking rituals that happened in slavery as well as the use of alcohol as awards for crop picking by slave masters durning slavery.

I also was intersted in the African section of the book that recorded drug use (Quat) in North Africa as long as 500 years ago.

The chapter on cocaine treament and the approaches to treating it in African American males is especially helpful. I liked the discusiion and questioning of compliance in therapy. I had never examined that most drug treatment for black males is forced treatment.

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Doin' Drugs: Patterns of African American Addiction
Doin' Drugs: Patterns of African American Addiction by William H. James (Hardcover - 1996)
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