This paper reports on selected findings from an ethnographic study of drug use by young people in a Dublin inner-city community considered to be "high risk" for problem drug use. In-depth individual interviews and focus-group discussions were used to generate extensive data on the social and drug-related experiences of young people ages 15-19 years. Fifty-seven young people were interviewed individually, and a subsample of 24 took part in focus-group discussions. The paper explores young people's drug "journeys" and documents emerging drug pathways. It examines the processes relevant to young people's drug transitions, drawing attention to the role of risk perceptions and risk boundaries in decision-making about drugs. The findings highligh...
This article discusses the role of drug consumption in the lives of young ‘clubbers’. Arguing that d...
This research aimed to examine the patterns of drug use among new communities in Ireland and to exam...
This paper provides the first estimates of recorded and hidden prevalence of opiate use among young...
The concept of risk, and its centrality to social life, is theoretically much discussed within late ...
THESIS 7352This ethnographic study of drug use is based in a socially disadvantaged Dublin locality ...
This paper documents selected findings from 'Choosers or losers? Influences on young people's decisi...
This research was undertaken against a background of increased drug use, and heightened concern for ...
Background: There is growing interest in describing the broader risk trajectories e...
THESIS 9139This thesis provides an in-depth exploration into the process of heroin and injecting ini...
This thesis provides an in-depth exploration into the process of heroin and injecting initiation amo...
This paper presents data from Irish children on their perceptions and experiences in relation to ill...
This report presents the findings of an exploratory study aimed at assessing the nature and extent o...
This report presented a study conducted in Dublin as part of a European collaborative project called...
Aims: This paper examines differentiated normalisation through the lens of young drug users from a m...
Much of the existing literature on drug related risk focuses on problem drug use, placing emphasis o...
This article discusses the role of drug consumption in the lives of young ‘clubbers’. Arguing that d...
This research aimed to examine the patterns of drug use among new communities in Ireland and to exam...
This paper provides the first estimates of recorded and hidden prevalence of opiate use among young...
The concept of risk, and its centrality to social life, is theoretically much discussed within late ...
THESIS 7352This ethnographic study of drug use is based in a socially disadvantaged Dublin locality ...
This paper documents selected findings from 'Choosers or losers? Influences on young people's decisi...
This research was undertaken against a background of increased drug use, and heightened concern for ...
Background: There is growing interest in describing the broader risk trajectories e...
THESIS 9139This thesis provides an in-depth exploration into the process of heroin and injecting ini...
This thesis provides an in-depth exploration into the process of heroin and injecting initiation amo...
This paper presents data from Irish children on their perceptions and experiences in relation to ill...
This report presents the findings of an exploratory study aimed at assessing the nature and extent o...
This report presented a study conducted in Dublin as part of a European collaborative project called...
Aims: This paper examines differentiated normalisation through the lens of young drug users from a m...
Much of the existing literature on drug related risk focuses on problem drug use, placing emphasis o...
This article discusses the role of drug consumption in the lives of young ‘clubbers’. Arguing that d...
This research aimed to examine the patterns of drug use among new communities in Ireland and to exam...
This paper provides the first estimates of recorded and hidden prevalence of opiate use among young...