Substance Abuse Recovery in College explains in authoritative detail what collegiate recovery communities are, the types of services they provide, and their role in the context of campus life, with extended examples from Texas Tech Universitys influential CSAR (Center for the Study of Addiction and Recovery) program. Usingdata from both conventional surveys and end-of-day daily Palm Pilot assessments as well as focus groups, the book examines community members experiences. In addition, the importance of a positive relationship between the recovery community and the school administration is emphasized.
Topics covered include:
The growing need for recovery services at colleges.
How recovery communities support abstinence and relapse prevention.
Who are community members and their addiction and treatment histories.
Daily lives of young adults in a collegiate recovery community.
Challenges and opportunities in establishing recovery communities on campus.
Building abstinence support into an academic curriculum.
This volume offers clear insights and up-close perspectives of importance to developmental and clinical child psychologists, social workers, higher education policymakers, and related professionals in human development, family studies, student services, college health care, and community services.
H. Harrington Cleveland received his J.D. at Boston College in 1991 and his Ph.D. in Family Studies and Human Development from the University of Arizona in 1998. Following his Ph.D., he spent 2 years as a National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Carolina Population Center at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. While at the University of North Carolina, he worked exclusively on analyzing data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health under the supervision of J. R. Udry. He has published extensively on the influences of genes and environments on both risk behaviors, such as alcohol and drug use, and the social experiences, such as associating with substance using peers, which can encourage these risk behaviors. The last few years, Dr. Cleveland has worked extensively with a community of college students in long-term recovery to understand how they construct their lives of abstinence.
Kitty Harris, Ph.D., is the Director of the Center for the Study of Addiction& Recovery at Texas Tech University. She is also Co-Director of the Texas Tech University Center for Child and Adolescent Development and Resiliency. Dr. Harris received her Masters Degree in Speech Communication from University of North Texas in 1974 and her Ph.D. in Human Development and Family Studies from Texas Tech University in 1983. Dr. Harris currently holds LCDC and LMFT licenses. She has been on the faculty of Texas Tech University since 1988. In addition, she serves as the Program Director for Supportive Adolescent Services and Pre-Adolescent Supportive Services, a mentoring program in the Lubbock Independent School District designed to help teens with their everyday lives.As Director of the Center for the Study of Addiction and Recovery, Dr. Harris coordinates two federal grants. One grant is a federal earmark in its second year of funding to replicate the Collegiate Recovery Community atuniversities nationwide. As a nationally recognized expert in recovery and recovery support, Dr. Harris was a member of the 2005 National Summit on Recovery sponsored by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and Center for Substance Abuse Treatment.
The Need for College Recovery Services.- Collegiate Recovery Communities: What They Are and How They Support Recovery.- Facilitating Identity Development in Collegiate Recovery: An Eriksonian Perspective.- Characteristics of Collegiate Recovery Community Members.- Maintaining Abstinence in College: Temptations and Tactics.- Daily Lives of Young Adult Members of a Collegiate Recovery Community.- How Membership in the Collegiate Recovery Community Maximizes Social Support for Abstinence and Reduces Risk of Relapse.- Building Support for Recovery into an Academic Curriculum: Student Reflections on the Value of Staff Run Seminars.- Establishing College-Based Recovery Communities: Opportunities and Challenges Encountered.