Describing recovery from drugs and alcohol: how ‘small’ practices of care matter

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Abstract

This article mobilises Heather Love’s writings on description to provide a novel analysis of recovery from drugs and alcohol. It discusses thin descriptions deriving from the presence of the researcher in the recovery space, and the service-users’ thick descriptions of their recovery experiences, produced through one-to-one interviews and photovoice. Thin and thick descriptions of recovery are brought together with the Deleuzo-Guattarian assemblage, for the provision of an insight into the practice of recovery that focuses on its daily crafting through small practices of care. Observing and describing how phone calls and text messages, assessment forms, doorways and art materials inform the generation of caring practices, recovery is reconfigured as an amalgam of small gestures that gradually expand life possibilities. This epistemological and methodological shift has the potential to unsettle the way we understand and do policy, and to re-think it as a practice emerging organically inside the recovery assemblage.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Theodoropoulou, L. (2021). Describing recovery from drugs and alcohol: how ‘small’ practices of care matter. Qualitative Research, 21(3), 409–425. https://doi.org/10.1177/1468794120975985

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