Search for dissertations about: "moral treatment"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 39 swedish dissertations containing the words moral treatment.
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1. Beyond treatment? : widening the approach to alcohol problems and solutions
Abstract : The dissertation includes four different studies which, from different points of departure, aim to illuminate problems and prospects of social work with alcohol problems in contemporary Sweden.Paper 1 analyses the historical succession of predominant public images of, and societal responses to, alcohol problems in Sweden during the past century. READ MORE
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2. Disciplining Freedom : Treatment Dilemmas and Subjectivity at a Detention Home for Young Men
Abstract : This ethnographic study explores treatment practices and staff-resident interaction at a detention home for young men, drawing on video recorded conversations and interviews. It investigates ideological dilemmas inherent in the institutional setting and how these produce complex subject positions to uptake, negotiate or refuse. READ MORE
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3. Moral concerns - Treatment staff and user perspectives on alcohol and drug problems
Abstract : Constructions of alcohol and drug problems, as well as of treatment, show a great variation that can be understood from the perspective of societal needs to categorize individuals as deviant. The thesis deals with contemporary perspectives, among staff in treatment of alcohol and drug problems and a group of drug users, on alcohol and drug problems and how these problems should be handled in the public sphere. READ MORE
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4. Changing behaviors or behavioral change? : A study of moral development and transbehavioral processes in juvenile institutional care
Abstract : .... READ MORE
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5. Your Treatment, My Treat? : On Lifestyle-Related Ill Health and Reasonable Responsibilitarianism
Abstract : How should the costs of unhealthy lifestyles be distributed between individual citizens and the state? This study approaches this question by investigating the justifiability of the responsibilitarian idea that people who are responsible for their lifestyle-choices should also be held responsible for the costs that these lifestyle-choices generate.Two main conclusions come out of this investigation. READ MORE