This article focuses on the ways in which members of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Narcotics Anonymous (NA) construct themselves as being in recovery from addiction. In this original study, data were taken from nineteen participants. They were analysed using Willig’s (2013) six-stage Foucauldian discourse analytic method. This method is suited to enabling the analyst to locate discourse resources used by participants within broader, dominant, discourses, and for exploration of the implications of these constructions for subjectivity and practice. This article presents a discussion of analytic findings. Mainstream academia has often constructed 12-Step recovery as a largely totalising discourse. This is likely to have negatively prejudic...
This study explores young adult men’s lived experience of addiction recovery through their involveme...
Twelve step recovery programs are prevalent in the United States, however, there is relatively littl...
Background: Mutual aid organizations, such as Narcotics Anonymous (NA), can provide support in subst...
The present study aimed to map out how members of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Narcotics Anonymous ...
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is the longest-running mutual aid group for people with alcohol use disord...
Commentary to: Is Alcoholics Anonymous religious, spiritual, neither? Findings from 25 years of mech...
This empirical study analyzed the language used by six individuals in recovery from alcohol use diso...
This empirical study analyzed the language used by six individuals in recovery from alcohol use diso...
The present study examined the relationship between AA/NA involvement and recovery from substance de...
In this paper, a discussion is built upon findings from a qualitative study that investigated how yo...
This Final Project is an exploration of the lived experience of dynamics of the personal will of sub...
Abstract: Alcoholism treatment has evolved to mean professionalized, scientifically based rehabilita...
This paper presents a single case study of a young adult’s early recovery from alcohol-use disorder ...
Background: Mutual aid organizations, such as Narcotics Anonymous (NA), can provide support in subst...
‘In return for a bottle and a hangover we have been given the Keys to the Kingdom’ (The ‘Big Book’ A...
This study explores young adult men’s lived experience of addiction recovery through their involveme...
Twelve step recovery programs are prevalent in the United States, however, there is relatively littl...
Background: Mutual aid organizations, such as Narcotics Anonymous (NA), can provide support in subst...
The present study aimed to map out how members of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Narcotics Anonymous ...
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is the longest-running mutual aid group for people with alcohol use disord...
Commentary to: Is Alcoholics Anonymous religious, spiritual, neither? Findings from 25 years of mech...
This empirical study analyzed the language used by six individuals in recovery from alcohol use diso...
This empirical study analyzed the language used by six individuals in recovery from alcohol use diso...
The present study examined the relationship between AA/NA involvement and recovery from substance de...
In this paper, a discussion is built upon findings from a qualitative study that investigated how yo...
This Final Project is an exploration of the lived experience of dynamics of the personal will of sub...
Abstract: Alcoholism treatment has evolved to mean professionalized, scientifically based rehabilita...
This paper presents a single case study of a young adult’s early recovery from alcohol-use disorder ...
Background: Mutual aid organizations, such as Narcotics Anonymous (NA), can provide support in subst...
‘In return for a bottle and a hangover we have been given the Keys to the Kingdom’ (The ‘Big Book’ A...
This study explores young adult men’s lived experience of addiction recovery through their involveme...
Twelve step recovery programs are prevalent in the United States, however, there is relatively littl...
Background: Mutual aid organizations, such as Narcotics Anonymous (NA), can provide support in subst...