Drug use by adolescents is usually viewed as the result of personal
vulnerability to peer pressures or drug pushers. This book provides a
new perspective which is sociological rather than epidemiological,
understanding patterns of drug-taking in the context of ordinary social
interaction. In this social worlds analysis, adolescents' own concerns
with boredom, depression, social identity, friendship, access to drugs,
self-control and folk pharmacology replace the professionals' focus on
deviant behaviour. Both drug-taking and drug-abstaining are analysed as
decisions made within social worlds made up of peers and family.