This may be of interest to some members given the strong links between many TCs and 12-step groups:
From the September 27, 2012 issue of the Faces and Voices of Recovery Enewsletter
eNewsletter - September 27, 2012
The Journal of Groups in Addiction & Recovery
The Journal of Groups in Addiction & Recovery is offering a special issue - "Broadening the Base of Addiction Mutual Support: Bringing Theory and Science to Contemporary Trends", that reviews the history of mutual-support groups for addiction that have arisen as adjuncts or alternatives to Twelve Step Programs. Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey D. Roth, MD, with Guest Editors William L. White, MA, and John F. Kelly, PhD, bring together research on new recovery groups arising in the form of institutions, ministries, community centers, special interest clubs, arts organizations, family groups, and more. Articles examine both secular groups, such as Secular Organization for Sobriety, SMART Recovery, and Women for Sobriety, and faith-based groups like Celebrate Recovery. Contributions come from leading researchers and practitioners in the field, including Walter Ginter, winner of the 2012 Vernon Johnson Award, presented by Faces & Voices of Recovery.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Broadening the Base of Addiction Mutual Support: Bringing Theory and Science to Contemporary Trends
Volume 7, Issue 2-4, 2012
The Promise of Mutual Support, Jeffrey Roth
Broadening the Base of Mutual Help Organizations, John Kelly and William White
SMART Recovery: Self-Empowering, Science-Based Recovery Support, Tom Horvath and Julie Yeterian
Empowering Your Sober Self: The LifeRing Approach to Addiction Recovery, Martin Nicolaus
Moderation Management: A Mutual Help Organization for Problem Drinkers Who Are Not Alcohol Dependent, Anna Lembke and Keith Humpheys
Women for Sobriety: Adaptations over Time - Over 35 Years of Challenges, Changes, and Continuity, Rebecca Fenner and Mary Gifford
Ethnic-Specific Support Systems as a Method for Sustaining Long-Term Addiction Recovery, Arthur Evans, Ijeoma Achara-Abrahams, Roland Lamb, and William White
Methadone Anonymous and Mutual Support for Medication-Assisted Recovery, Walter Ginter and Joyce Woods
Mutual Help Groups for People with Co-Occurring Disorders, Joan Zweben and Sarah Ashbrook
Giving Back and Getting Something Back: The Role of Mutual Aid Groups for Individuals in Recovery from Incarceration, Addiction, and Mental Illness, Chyrell Bellamy, Michael Rowe, Patricia Benedict, and Larry Davidson
Use of Mutual Support to Counteract the Effects of Socially Constructed Stigma: Gender and Drug Addiction, Jolene Sanders
Youth Participation in Mutual Support Groups: History, Current Knowledge, and Areas for Future Research, Lora Passetti, Susan Godley, and Mark Godley
Al-Anon Family Groups: Origins, Conceptual Basis, Outcomes, and Research Opportunities, Christine Timko, Brendan Young, and Rudolf Moos
New Addiction Recovery Support Institutions: Mobilizing Support beyond Professional Addiction Treatment and Recovery Mutual Aid, William White, John Kelly, and Jeffrey Roth
EDITOR BIOGRAPHIES
Jeffrey D. Roth, MD, Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Groups in Addiction & Recovery, is an addiction psychiatrist and group psychotherapist in private practice. He is a fellow of the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) and the American Group Psychotherapy Association. Dr. Roth has presented workshops on group psychotherapy to diverse professional audiences, including group therapists, addictions treatment professionals, psychoanalysts, employee assistance professionals, attorneys, and judges. He has served as director, associate director and consultant in numerous group relations conferences sponsored by the A. K. Rice Institute.
William L. White, MA is a Senior Research Consultant at Chestnut Health Systems / Lighthouse Institute and past-chair of the board of Recovery Communities United. Since 1969, Mr. White has published more than 300 articles, monographs, research reports, and book chapters and 16 books, including Slaying the Dragon - The History of Addiction Treatment and Recovery in America, winner of the McGovern Family Foundation Award for best book on addiction recovery. He has been featured in addiction specials on PBS and Showtime and received awards from the National Association of Addiction Treatment Providers, the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, NAADAC: The Association of Addiction Professionals, the American Society of Addiction Medicine, and the Native American Wellbriety Movement.
John F. Kelly, PhD is a licensed clinical psychologist specializing in the treatment of alcohol and drug addiction and related problems. He is currently the Director of the Addiction Recovery Management Service at Massachusetts General Hospital and an Associate Professor in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. He serves on the Board of Directors for the Society of Addiction Psychology of the American Psychological Association and has been a consultant to the White House Office of National Drug Policy, the US Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, and the US Department of Education. He has published more than 100 scientific books, articles, and chapters in the addiction field and speaks regularly nationally and internationally. He currently runs a private practice treatment center in Boston, MA.
R. Yates
Senior Research Fellow
Scottish Addiction Studies
School of Applied Social Science
University of Stirling
Scotland
T: +44 (0) 1786-467737
F: +44 (0) 1786-466299
W: http://www.dass.stir.ac.uk/sections/showsection.php?id=4 (home)
W: http://www.drugslibrary.stir.ac.uk/ (online library)
W: http://roryyates.bandcamp.com (Wrestling With Demons: Four Songs of Addiction & Recovery)
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The University of Stirling is ranked in the top 50 in the world in The Times Higher Education 100 Under 50 table, which ranks the world's best 100 universities under 50 years old.
The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland,
number SC 011159.
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