Deviance and Medicalization: From Badness to SicknessTemple University Press, 20 àÁ.Â. 2010 - 352 ˹éÒ This classic text on the nature of deviance, originally published in 1980, is now reissued with a new Afterword by the authors. In this new edition of their award-winning book, Conrad and Schneider investigate the origins and contemporary consequences of the medicalization of deviance. They examine specific cases—madness, alcoholism, opiate addiction, homosexuality, delinquency, and child abuse—and draw out their theoretical and policy implications. In a new chapter, the authors address developments in the last decade—including AIDS, domestic violence, co-dependency, hyperactivity in children, and learning disabilities—and they discuss the fate of medicalization in the 1990s with the changes in medicine and continued restrictions on social services. |
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˹éÒ viii
... patient is considered the model of how to deal with the cases described in Deviance and Med- icalization . This psychologizing of social prob- lems leads away from the analyses of the social structure of culture — the socially shared in ...
... patient is considered the model of how to deal with the cases described in Deviance and Med- icalization . This psychologizing of social prob- lems leads away from the analyses of the social structure of culture — the socially shared in ...
˹éÒ 9
... patient said about symptoms ; the physi- cian's own observations of signs of illness and the patient's appearance and ... patients pragmatically , for medical theory had little to DEVIANCE , DEFINITIONS , AND THE MEDICAL PROFESSION 9.
... patient said about symptoms ; the physi- cian's own observations of signs of illness and the patient's appearance and ... patients pragmatically , for medical theory had little to DEVIANCE , DEFINITIONS , AND THE MEDICAL PROFESSION 9.
˹éÒ 10
From Badness to Sickness Peter Conrad. their patients pragmatically , for medical theory had little to offer . Most colonial physicians practiced medicine only part - time , earning their livelihoods as clergymen , teachers , farmers ...
From Badness to Sickness Peter Conrad. their patients pragmatically , for medical theory had little to offer . Most colonial physicians practiced medicine only part - time , earning their livelihoods as clergymen , teachers , farmers ...
˹éÒ 15
... Patients may come to physicians , but physicians tell them what proce- dures they need . The availability of medical ... patient - consumer . Since the 1930s an in- creasing amount of medical care has been paid for through " third ...
... Patients may come to physicians , but physicians tell them what proce- dures they need . The availability of medical ... patient - consumer . Since the 1930s an in- creasing amount of medical care has been paid for through " third ...
˹éÒ 32
... patient re- lationship . It is this relationship that serves the key social control function of minimizing the disruptiveness of sickness to the group or soci- ety . The sick role has four components , two exemptions from normal ...
... patient re- lationship . It is this relationship that serves the key social control function of minimizing the disruptiveness of sickness to the group or soci- ety . The sick role has four components , two exemptions from normal ...
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1 | |
17 | |
38 | |
drunkenness Inebriety and the disease concept | 73 |
the fall and rise of medical Involvement | 110 |
delinquency hyperactivity and child abuse | 145 |
from sin to sickness to lifestyle | 172 |
the search for the born criminal and the medical control of criminality | 215 |
consequences for society | 241 |
10 A theoretical statement on the medlcalization of deviance | 261 |
a decade later | 277 |
Bibliography | 293 |
Author Index | 311 |
Subject Index | 317 |
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Deviance and Medicalization: From Badness to Sickness Peter Conrad,Joseph W. Schneider ªÁºÒ§Êèǹ¢Í§Ë¹Ñ§Ê×Í - 1992 |
Deviance and Medicalization, from Badness to Sickness Peter Conrad,Joseph W. Schneider ÁØÁÁͧÍÂèÒ§ÂèÍ - 1980 |
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