| Title: | Social capital and the Irish drug scene: Rural youth, cocaine and Irish travellers |
| Authors: | Van Hout, M. C. (Marie Claire) |
| Advisors: | Bunton, R. (Robin) |
| Citation: | Van Hout, M. C. (2010) Social capital and the Irish drug scene: Rural youth, cocaine and Irish travellers. Unpublished PhD Thesis. Teesside University. |
| Publisher: | Teesside University |
| Issue Date: | Dec-2010 |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10149/117965 |
| Abstract: | National prevalence surveys indicate that lifetime and recreational drug use among all
social classes have increased steadily over the last decade in Ireland (Moran et al.,
2001a, Mayock, 2002, National Advisory Committee on Drugs, 2008a). Drugs
research has been traditionally based on the identification, weighting and
interrelatedness of risk and protective factors within a "risk prevention paradigm". This
paradigm has been criticised for its lack of inclusion of individual, group and wider
structural aspects, and occurs within a greater awareness of greater social discourse
and societal shifts. The research papers in this portfolio of work are thematically
analysed and conceptualised within the theoretical framework of cognitive and
structural social capital. The descriptive research and later, more conceptual papers
investigating drug use among rural youth, Travellers and cocaine use, are thereby
explored in terms of the potential ‘normalisation of rural youth drug use’ within
contemporary risk discourse, the assimilatory threat of increasing drug use among the
‘Traveller community’., and the emergence of the ‘recreational cocaine user’ in Irish
society. The social processes of individualisation, reciprocity and trust which constitute
social capital are deemed to provide potent collective frameworks for the navigation of
risk in day to day ‘localised’ settings. The ‘interrelated normative frameworks’ and
‘processes of risk neutralisation’ are underpinned within a wider social capital
understanding of the meaning of drug activity in associational life based on
‘interpersonal and institutional trust’ and ‘mutual resource acquisition’. Contemporary
drug policies must consider the contextual constraints of the ‘risk society’, which impact
on inherent individual ‘power resources’, whereby individual agency and drug taking is
better understood within situational agency of ‘localised’ social, gender, ethnic and
cultural capital. |
| Type: | Thesis or dissertation |
| Language: | en |
| Keywords: | substance use ethnicity young people social capital |
| Appears in Collections: | PhD Theses SSSL Theses
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| Files in This Item: |
| File |
Description |
Size |
Format |
View/Open |
| 117965.pdf | Final Thesis | 1235Kb | Adobe PDF |  View/Open | | 117965.pdf | Licence Agreement (Administrator Use Only) | 502Kb | Adobe PDF | 
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