Abstract

This article illuminates how the transfiguration from the sociological concept of moral-panic to moral-regulation replicates wider socioeconomic conditions. The author urges that the Alcohol and Other Drug (named so in order that alcohol can also be categorised as a drug) clinicians reflect on the structural and reproductive impact of their work. The sociological concept, “moral-panic” has socio-clinical efficacy in the (AOD) treatment field. It has much affinity as history in the field is littered with the phenomenon. The author, a long time Alcohol and Drug clinician, now lecturer in the AOD field, considers the phenomenon in New Zealand around the use what is known locally as P (pure) or methamphetamine. Various texts on a War on P campaign were analysed. It was found that, through various literary devices familiar themes emerged, evoking local folk devils and heroes. This analysis was carried out against a backdrop of creeping neo-liberalism, a new right-wing government committed to market liberalisation, and thereby the increased availability of a more dangerous yet licit drug, known as ethyl alcohol (Saunders, 1989). However, the concept of moral-panic can be deployed as a means to critically analyse the impact of various licit and illicit drugs under the theme of proportionality. Moreover, a sociological understanding of the prevention paradox can create a pathway to understand the role of moral-regulation and its ramifications as outlined by a governmental analysis. An appreciation of Moral-panic theory and Moral-regulation is crucial in the AoD field, as alternatives to dominant medical and psychological individualising discourses, in order to empower clinician and client alike and to politicise a discipline that traditionally eschews politicisation. The author argues that reflecting on the trajectory from moral-panic to moral-regulation creates insights into the dismantling western social state. From an ethical standpoint, it is important that clinicians become aware of the politically reproductive nature of their profession and how they are required to codify themselves and clients into ideological positions.

Highlights

  • “Society as presently structured will continue to generate problems for its members... and condemn whatever solutions choose”

  • The concept of moral-panic remains “one of the few sociological concepts that have withstood the test of time” (Innes cited in Rohloff & Wright, 2010: p. 404)

  • The Samples The samples ranged from a specific series of six articles published in May 2009 in the conservative leaning New Zealand Herald and a later series of articles run by the same paper

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Summary

Introduction

“Society as presently structured will continue to generate problems for its members... and condemn whatever solutions choose”. This signalled a watershed in the field, reconstructing the clinician/client interaction, replacing the why (do they have this problem) to how (do we manage this). AoD workers worked at certificate level with minimal academic qualifications, often having a recovering history This reflected the influence of the virulently non-professional, anti-intellectual twelve-step movement (Valverde, 1999) which owes its power to problematising the reliability of the intellect (or will in its previous form). This can manifest itself in one of four forms of adaptations, relevant in varying degrees in the abuse of drugs These include: a) Innovation when persons accept the dominant cultural goals of material success but disagree with the means. B) Ritualism where these goals are rejected but legitimate means are accepted, an example may be getting stoned on marijuana to get through the day

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