Abstract
The present study tries to link some demographic, social, psychological and attitudinal variables of drug abuse. The findings were centred around the readiness of secondary school youth in Israel to be involved in drugs and their active searching for drug involvement. A dependent variable based on five indices of drug involvement was constructed. It was then related to parental control, peer involvement in drugs, sex differentiation and membership in youth movements. A bi-modal high involvement curve was found, the first mode consisting of youth of low socio-economic strata who are drop-outs, who associate with outside peer groups as an alternative to their shaky and diffused families and lack of involvement in school life. The other mode consists of youth with a higher socio-economic background who are involved with drugs due to their desire for new hedonistic and emotional experiences. Their openness to experiment with drugs is a corollary to their involvement within a peer group which condones and legitimizes narcotics as well as any experiences which irrespective of their source, provide 'a good high'. There is a sub-group within this group which would be involved with drugs as a partial escape from personal problems.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 17-32 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | Bulletin on Narcotics |
Volume | 30 |
Issue number | 4 |
State | Published - 1978 |