Fr. 69.00

Evolution of Self-Help - How a Health Movement Became an Institution

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext "Archibald has quantitatively estimated the legitimacy of self-help organizations via a comprehensive! careful! and original examination of medical! academic! popular! and political opinion on these groups (in newspapers! journals! and congressional hearings)! and analyzed competition for resources among the groups utilizing all of these data. This book is a very relevant reference tool for anyone interested in the phenomenon of self-help in the U.S." Informationen zum Autor MATTHEW E. ARCHIBALD is Assistant Professor of Sociology, Emory University, USA. Klappentext This book examines the institutionalization of self-help in the United States using organizational and social movement theories. Looking at a fifty-year period! Archibald charts the formation and dissolution of over 500 medical! academic! and popular organizations. He explores the ways in which the marginal practices of sufferers of chronic conditions like Parkinson's or alcoholism became the common solution for all manner of medical! behavioural! and psychological problems. Zusammenfassung This book examines the institutionalization of self-help in the United States using organizational and social movement theories. He explores the ways in which the marginal practices of sufferers of chronic conditions like Parkinson's or alcoholism became the common solution for all manner of medical, behavioural, and psychological problems. Inhaltsverzeichnis The Demography of Self-Help Defining Self-Help: How Does a Movement become an Institution? From Small Beginnings: Growth and Diversification Legitimation: The Paradox of Public Recognition of Self-Help The Evolution of Public Recognition and Its Consequences Resources: How Competition Selects Only the Fittest Organizations Conclusion and Future Directions

List of contents

The Demography of Self-Help Defining Self-Help: How Does a Movement become an Institution? From Small Beginnings: Growth and Diversification Legitimation: The Paradox of Public Recognition of Self-Help The Evolution of Public Recognition and Its Consequences Resources: How Competition Selects Only the Fittest Organizations Conclusion and Future Directions

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"Archibald has quantitatively estimated the legitimacy of self-help organizations via a comprehensive, careful, and original examination of medical, academic, popular, and political opinion on these groups (in newspapers, journals, and congressional hearings), and analyzed competition for resources among the groups utilizing all of these data. This book is a very relevant reference tool for anyone interested in the phenomenon of self-help in the U.S."

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