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{{Short description|American psychologist}}
{{TOCright}}
{{For|the astrophysicist|Stanton J. Peale}}
'''Stanton Peele''', Ph. D., J.D., (born [[January 8]], [[1946]]) is a licensed [[psychologist]], [[attorney]], practicing [[psychotherapist]] and the author of books and articles on the subject of [[alcoholism]], [[addiction]] and addiction treatment.<ref>http://www.peele.net/about/cv.html</ref>
'''Stanton Peele''' (born January 8, 1946) is a [[psychologist]], [[Lawyer|attorney]], [[psychotherapist]] and the [[author]] of books and articles on the subject of [[alcoholism]], [[Substance dependence|addiction]] and addiction treatment.<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|url=http://www.peele.net/about/cv.html|title=Curriculum Vitae Stanton Peele|website=www.peele.net}}</ref>


==Career==
====Publications====
Raised in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]],<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/addiction-in-society/201003/my-fabulous-sports-career-the-mean-streets-philadelphia|title=My Fabulous Sports Career on the Mean Streets of Philadelphia|website=Psychology Today}}</ref> Peele received his [[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]] in [[political science]] ''cum laude'' on municipal and state scholarships from the [[University of Pennsylvania]] in 1967. Supported by a number of fellowships (including the [[Woodrow Wilson Fellowship]]), he went on to earn a [[Ph.D.]] in [[social psychology]] from the [[University of Michigan]] in 1975. From 1976 to 2012, he maintained a private practice and consultancy while based in [[Morristown, New Jersey]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.peele.net/lib/love.html|title=Love Can Be An Addiction|website=www.peele.net}}</ref>
Peele is the author of nine books including, ''Love and Addiction'' (1975), ''The Meaning of Addiction'' (1985/1998), ''Diseasing of America'' (1989), ''The Truth about Addiction and Recovery'' (with Archie Brodsky and Mary Arnold, 1991), ''Resisting 12-Step Coercion'' (with Charles Bufe and Archie Brodsky, 2001), ''7 Tools to Beat Addiction'' (2004), and ''Addiction-Proof Your Child'' (2007), as well as 200 professional publications.


After earning his [[Juris Doctor|J.D.]] from the [[Rutgers School of Law – Newark]] in 1997, Peele was admitted to the [[New York (state)|New York]] and [[New Jersey]] bars. He maintained a concurrent law practice (including two stints as a pool attorney in the [[Morris County, New Jersey|Morris County]] Public Defender's Office that offered vital insights into the workings of the American [[criminal justice system]])<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/opinions/1998/08/09/a-drug-users-advocate/cfa27338-0fa0-43f0-b62d-72af01449822/|title=A DRUG-USERS' ADVOCATE|via=www.washingtonpost.com}}</ref> until 2012. As a psychologist and addiction specialist, he has held visiting and adjunct academic positions at [[New York University]] (adjunct clinical professor; 2003–2007), [[Bournemouth University]] (visiting professor; 2003–2010) and [[The New School]] (adjunct professor; 2004–2010).<ref name="auto"/> He currently resides in [[Brooklyn, New York]].<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/06/nyregion/a-different-path-to-fighting-addiction.html|title=A Different Path to Fighting Addiction (Published 2014)|first=Gabrielle|last=Glaser|newspaper=The New York Times|date=July 3, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{Cite Twitter profile|speele5}}</ref>
====''Love and Addiction''====
Peele began his critique of standard notions of addiction when he published ''Love and Addiction'' (coauthored with Archie Brodsky).<ref>[http://www.peele.net/lib/laa.html Love and Addiction<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>According to Peele's experiential/environmental approach, addictions are negative patterns of behavior that result from an over-attachment people form to experiences generated from a range of involvements. Most people experience addiction to some degree at least for periods of time during their lives. He does not view addictions as medical problems but as "problems of life" that most people overcome. <ref>[http://www2.potsdam.edu/hansondj/Controversies/1053972711.html Censorship in Science<!-- Bot generated title -->] (site funded by the [[Distilled Spirits Council of the United States]])</ref> The failure to do so is the exception rather than the rule, he argues.<ref>[http://www.peele.net/philosophy/index.html Stanton Peele's Approach<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


Peele inaugurated the Life Process Program (LPP) as a residential treatment program in Iowa from 2008 to 2011; LPP went online at that point and has been an international coaching service into the present (see the “Life Process Model of Addiction” <ref>{{Citation |title=Life-process model of addiction |date=2022-03-07 |url=https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Life-process_model_of_addiction&oldid=1075837631 |work=Wikipedia |language=en |access-date=2022-05-01}}</ref>).
====Views on alcoholism====
Peele's belief that alcoholism and other addictions are not biologically based diseases runs counter to research on the subject and in opposition to the view generally accepted by the medical community (that genetic, neurological and behavioral studies distinguish those with [[physical dependence|alcohol dependence]] from problem drinkers),<ref>[http://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/faqs.htm#12 Alcohol - Frequently Asked Questions], US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)</ref> and unaccepted by many in the alcoholism treatment, education, and prevention fields.<ref>[http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/278/5335/45 Addiction Is a Brain Disease, and It Matters, Alan I. Leshner, et al., Science 278, 45 (1997)]</ref>


Peele is the author of fourteen books, including ''Love and Addiction'' (1975), ''The Meaning of Addiction'' (1985/1998), ''Diseasing of America'' (1989), ''The Truth about Addiction and Recovery'' (with Archie Brodsky and Mary Arnold, 1991), ''Resisting 12-Step Coercion'' (with Charles Bufe and Archie Brodsky, 2001), ''7 Tools to Beat Addiction'' (2004), ''Addiction-Proof Your Child'' (2007), ''Recover! Stop Thinking Like an Addict'' (with Ilse Thompson, 2014), ''Outgrowing Addiction: With Common Sense Instead of "Disease" Therapy'' (with Zach Rhoads, 2019), and his memoir, ''A Scientific Life on the Edge: My Lonely Quest to Change How We See Addiction'' (2021), as well as 250 other professional publications.
Peele challenged the total abstinence method of dealing with addiction in a [[Psychology Today]] article which compared the ''Life Process Program'' with the ''disease model''<ref>[http://www.peele.net/lib/allornothing.html Recovering from an All-or-Nothing Approach to Alcohol<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>, he also argues against the views of Alan Leshner and others that addiction is a brain disease.<ref>[http://www.peele.net/lib/hungry.html Hungry for The Next Fix: Behind the relentless, misguided search for a medical cure for addiction<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


==Addiction==
====Views on 12 Step Treatment====
He began his critique of standard notions of addiction when he published ''Love and Addiction'' (coauthored with Archie Brodsky).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.peele.net/lib/laa.html|title=Love and Addiction|website=www.peele.net}}</ref> According to Peele's experiential/environmental approach, addictions are negative patterns of behavior that result from an over-attachment people form to experiences generated from a range of involvements. He contends that most people experience addiction to some degree at least for periods of time during their lives. He does not view addictions as medical problems but as "problems of life" that most people overcome. The failure to do so is the exception rather than the rule, he argues.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.peele.net/about/index.html|title=About Stanton Peele|website=www.peele.net}}</ref> This view opposes the [[brain disease model of addiction]].


In his books on non-addictive child rearing, ''Addiction-Proof Your Child'' (2007) and ''Outgrowing Addiction'' (with child development specialist Zach Rhoads, 2019), Peele argues that the best antidote for addiction is raising independent children who are competent and who have pro-social, health-oriented values. These same profiles, along with socially privileged backgrounds, account for which young people are able to overcome whatever addictive episodes they have.
In a co-authored book, ''Resisting 12 step Coercion'', Peele outlines his case against court mandated attendance of [[twelve-step program|twelve-step]] drug and alcohol treatment programs. In his book, he argues that these treatment programs are useless and sometimes harmful, he presents research on alternative treatment options and accuses some addiction providers of routine violation of standard medical ethics.<ref> Peele, Stanton ''"Resisting 12 Step Coercion"'' Book Online : http://www.morerevealed.com/library/resist/</ref>


In a number of [https://www.peele.net/lib/abuse.html papers], as well as his 1989 book, ''Diseasing of America: Addiction Treatment Out of Control'', Peele has argued that treatment— including as [https://www.peele.net/lib/niaaa.html ideally administered] in [[Project MATCH]]— is an inadequate, even [https://peele.net/lib/treatment.html iatrogenic], cultural response to addiction. This is particularly true, he finds, for disease treatments, since they diminish people's sense of themselves and their ability to change.
==== Acknowledgements ====
Peele won the 1994 [[Alfred R. Lindesmith]] Award for achievement in the Field of Scholarship from the Drug Policy Foundation, Washington, DC,<ref>[http://www.peele.net/aab/dpf.html Alfred R. Lindesmith Award for Achievement in Scholarship, Drug Policy Foundation<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and the 1989 Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies Mark Keller Award for Alcohol Studies for his article "The limitations of control-of-supply models for explaining and preventing alcoholism and drug addiction," JSA, 48:61-77, 1987. .<ref>[http://www.peele.net/aab/keller.html Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Other acknowledgements have come in the The Creation of the Annual Stanton Peele Lecture, 1998, by the Addiction Studies Program, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia and a Lifetime Achievement Award, 2006, International Network on Personal Meaning, Vancouver.<ref>Stanton Peele's Curriculum Vitae [http://www.peele.net/about/cv.html]</ref>


When it was published in 1975, ''Love and Addiction'' pre-dated by almost a decade the notion of [[sex addiction]] and codependency popularized by authors such as Patrick Carnes, whose ''Out of the Shadows'', one of the earliest popular books to describe sex addiction, came out in 1983, and Melody Beattie, whose ''Codependent No More'' was published in 1986. ''Love and Addiction'' pre-dated the current popular use of the terms "sex addiction" and "codependency" to describe disorders of love attachment, as these terms were not part of Peele and Brodsky's nomenclature. However, because ''Love and Addiction'' was concerned with observing the same condition of addictive human attachments, it has been argued that this is the first book to be written on the subject of codependent relationships.<ref>{{Cite journal|url = http://alexkwee.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/kweejsac07.pdf|title = Constructing addiction from experience and context: Peele and Brodsky's Love and Addiction revisited|last = Kwee|first = Alex|date = 2007|journal = Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention|volume = 14|issue = 3|pages = 221–237|doi = 10.1080/10720160701480535|s2cid = 144242381|access-date = January 11, 2015}}</ref>
==Criticism and funding==
In a review of ''The Meaning of Addiction'', Addiction researcher Dr [[Griffith Edwards]] described his ambivalence to Peele's work:
{{Quote|"With these and other issues treated in cavalier fashion, with referencing highly incomplete and crucial work often ignored, one begins to feel that this is a book where polemic and scholarship have become inextricably and unhappily mixed. ... Peele is not only a psychologist of distinction, but someone who can make use of sociological and biological ideas. ... So there's the dilemma."|Griffith Edwards|Review of ''The Meaning of Addiction''.<ref>[[Griffith Edwards]]. ''The Meaning of Addiction'' (book review). ''British Journal of Addiction'', Dec85, Vol. 80 Issue 4, p447-448.</ref>}}


In reviewing the legacy of ''Love and Addiction'', psychologist Dr. Alex Kwee wrote:<blockquote>"That experiences can be addictive was a prescient notion in 1975 as psychology now embraces the concept of the process (or behavioral) addictions such as pathological gambling, compulsive eating, and sex addiction. But it must surely be to Peele's dismay that instead of rethinking substance addiction as a medical illness, psychology has gone and classified the behaviors as addictions in the same medical sense and yielded the solution into the hands of the 12-Steps."<ref>{{Cite journal|url = http://alexkwee.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/kweejsac07.pdf|title = Constructing addiction from experience and context: Peele and Brodsky's Love and Addiction revisited|last = Kwee|first = Alex|date = 2007|journal = Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention|volume = 14|issue = 3|pages = 221–237|doi = 10.1080/10720160701480535|s2cid = 144242381|access-date = January 11, 2015}}</ref></blockquote>
The [[Distilled Spirits Council of the United States]] (DISCUS), and the [[Wine Institute]] provided unrestricted grants to fund some of Peele's work.<ref>[http://www.peele.net/lib/exploring.html Exploring Psychological Benefits Associated with Moderate Alcohol Use: A Necessary Corrective to Assessments of Drinking Outcomes?]</ref>

==Views on alcoholism==

Peele maintains that, depending on the person, abstinence or moderation are valid approaches to treat excessive drinking. In a [[Psychology Today]] article which compared the ''Life Process Program'' with the ''disease model'',<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.peele.net/lib/allornothing.html|title=Recovering from an All-or-Nothing Approach to Alcohol|website=www.peele.net}}</ref> he also argues against the theory proposed decades ago by modern physicians, mental health professionals, research scientists, etc. that addiction is a disease.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.peele.net/lib/hungry.html|title=Hungry for The Next Fix: Behind the relentless, misguided search for a medical cure for addiction|website=www.peele.net}}</ref> In ''Diseasing of America'' (1989), Peele contested Dr George Vaillant's pro-disease treatise ''[[The Natural History of Alcoholism Revisited|The Natural History of Alcoholism]]''.

Peele has been concerned with identifying cultural factors (those differentiating [https://www.peele.net/lib/evil.html Temperance from non-Temperance societies]) in support of positive alcohol experiences, as well as [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1694753/pdf/amjph00530-0023.pdf medical] and [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11053757/ psychological] benefits due to positive drinking practices. Primarily, he has found, such drinking occurs where alcohol use is socialized in young people in family and community settings. He has also sought to [https://filtermag.org/positive-drug-use/amp/ generalize this paradigm to drug use].

==Views on 12 step/disease treatment==

In a co-authored book, ''Resisting 12 Step Coercion'' (2001), Peele outlined his case against court mandated attendance of [[twelve-step program|twelve-step]] drug and alcohol treatment programs. He argued that these treatment programs are useless and sometimes harmful, he presented research on alternative treatment options, and accused some addiction providers of routine violation of standard medical ethics, an accusation that is likewise often leveled at Peele by disease proponents.<ref>Peele, Stanton ''"Resisting 12 Step Coercion"'' Book Online : https://web.archive.org/web/20170407233750/http://www.morerevealed.com/library/resist/</ref>

In ''The Truth About Addiction and Recovery'' (1991) and ''7 Tools to Beat Addiction'' (2004), Peele laid out what he believes to be the elements of alternative treatment. He developed these ideas as the ''[[Life-process model of addiction|Life Process Program]],'' which was the basis for a non-12 Step residential treatment program and is now offered as an online treatment resource by Dr. Peele and colleagues.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://lifeprocessprogram.com/ |title = Online Program for Addiction Recovery {{!}} AA Alternative}}</ref>

Peele attributes the [https://filtermag.org/court-opioid-addiction-disease/amp/ intensifying drug crisis] in the US to the continuing acceptance and spread of the [[disease model of addiction]] in both its 12-step and brain disease forms since, he feels, the disease model undercuts the sense of self-efficacy that characterizes positive, controlled substance use.

==Criticism==

In a review of ''The Meaning of Addiction'', addiction researcher Dr [[Griffith Edwards]] stated the following about Peele's work:
{{Blockquote|"With these and other issues treated in cavalier fashion, with referencing highly incomplete and crucial work often ignored, one begins to feel that this is a book where polemic and scholarship have become inextricably and unhappily mixed. [...] Peele is not only a psychologist of distinction, but someone who can make use of sociological and biological ideas. [...] So there's the dilemma."|Griffith Edwards|Review of ''The Meaning of Addiction''.<ref>[[Griffith Edwards]]. ''The Meaning of Addiction'' (book review). ''British Journal of Addiction'', Dec85, Vol. 80 Issue 4, p447-448.</ref>}}

==Recognition==
{{Blockquote
|Stanton Peele has done as much as anyone to reveal the inadequacies, absurdities, and injustices of the idea that addiction is a disease and, specifically, that it is a disease of the brain. In a constant flow of influential books, articles, and blogs over more than forty years, he has persuasively extended the critique of the disease theory of addiction beyond the scientific community to the general public. When the disease theory is eventually replaced by a more rational and humane approach in the popular understanding of addiction, Stanton Peele will be first in line to receive the plaudits, and those of us who broadly share his view will owe him a profound debt of gratitude.

|[[Nick Heather]], PhD, Emeritus Professor of Alcohol & Other Drug Studies, Northumbria University, UK; co-editor, ''Evaluating the Brain Disease Model of Addiction''.}}
* '''1989''': Rutgers [[Center of Alcohol Studies]] Mark Keller Award for Alcohol Studies for his article "The limitations of control-of-supply models for explaining and preventing alcoholism and drug addiction," JSA, 48:61-77, 1987.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.peele.net/aab/keller.html|title=Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies|website=www.peele.net}}</ref>
*'''1994''': [[Alfred R. Lindesmith]] Lifetime Achievement Award for Scholarship from the [[Drug Policy Foundation]], Washington, DC,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.peele.net/aab/dpf.html|title=Alfred R. Lindesmith Award for Achievement in Scholarship, Drug Policy Foundation|website=www.peele.net}}</ref>
* '''1998''': Creation of the Annual Stanton Peele Lecture, 1998, by the Addiction Studies Program, [[Deakin University]], Melbourne, Australia.
* '''2006''': Lifetime Achievement Award, 2006, International Network on Personal Meaning, Vancouver.<ref name="auto"/>

==Funding==

Lindesmith Center (now the Drug Policy Alliance): grant to write an adolescent drug guide (1996).

The [[Distilled Spirits Council of the United States]] (DISCUS), and the [[Wine Institute (California)|Wine Institute]] provided unrestricted grants for research used in the journal article ''Exploring Psychological Benefits Associated with Moderate Alcohol Use: A Necessary Corrective to Assessments of Drinking Outcomes?''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.peele.net/lib/exploring.html|title=Exploring Psychological Benefits Associated with Moderate Alcohol Use: A Necessary Corrective to Assessments of Drinking Outcomes?|website=www.peele.net}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.peele.net/ The Stanton Peele Addiction Website]
*[http://www.peele.net/ The Stanton Peele Addiction Website]
*[http://lifeprocessprogram.com/ The Life Process Program]


{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Peele, Stanton}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Peele, Stanton}}
[[Category:1946 births]]
[[Category:1946 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:American psychologists]]
[[Category:21st-century American psychologists]]
[[Category:American health and wellness writers]]
[[Category:American health and wellness writers]]
[[Category:Psychotherapists]]
[[Category:American psychotherapists]]
[[Category:Researchers in alcohol abuse]]
[[Category:Place of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:Writers on addiction]]
[[Category:University of Michigan alumni]]
[[Category:20th-century American psychologists]]
[[Category:Academics of Bournemouth University]]

Latest revision as of 15:40, 17 October 2024

Stanton Peele (born January 8, 1946) is a psychologist, attorney, psychotherapist and the author of books and articles on the subject of alcoholism, addiction and addiction treatment.[1]

Career

[edit]

Raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,[2] Peele received his B.A. in political science cum laude on municipal and state scholarships from the University of Pennsylvania in 1967. Supported by a number of fellowships (including the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship), he went on to earn a Ph.D. in social psychology from the University of Michigan in 1975. From 1976 to 2012, he maintained a private practice and consultancy while based in Morristown, New Jersey.[3]

After earning his J.D. from the Rutgers School of Law – Newark in 1997, Peele was admitted to the New York and New Jersey bars. He maintained a concurrent law practice (including two stints as a pool attorney in the Morris County Public Defender's Office that offered vital insights into the workings of the American criminal justice system)[4] until 2012. As a psychologist and addiction specialist, he has held visiting and adjunct academic positions at New York University (adjunct clinical professor; 2003–2007), Bournemouth University (visiting professor; 2003–2010) and The New School (adjunct professor; 2004–2010).[1] He currently resides in Brooklyn, New York.[5][6]

Peele inaugurated the Life Process Program (LPP) as a residential treatment program in Iowa from 2008 to 2011; LPP went online at that point and has been an international coaching service into the present (see the “Life Process Model of Addiction” [7]).

Peele is the author of fourteen books, including Love and Addiction (1975), The Meaning of Addiction (1985/1998), Diseasing of America (1989), The Truth about Addiction and Recovery (with Archie Brodsky and Mary Arnold, 1991), Resisting 12-Step Coercion (with Charles Bufe and Archie Brodsky, 2001), 7 Tools to Beat Addiction (2004), Addiction-Proof Your Child (2007), Recover! Stop Thinking Like an Addict (with Ilse Thompson, 2014), Outgrowing Addiction: With Common Sense Instead of "Disease" Therapy (with Zach Rhoads, 2019), and his memoir, A Scientific Life on the Edge: My Lonely Quest to Change How We See Addiction (2021), as well as 250 other professional publications.

Addiction

[edit]

He began his critique of standard notions of addiction when he published Love and Addiction (coauthored with Archie Brodsky).[8] According to Peele's experiential/environmental approach, addictions are negative patterns of behavior that result from an over-attachment people form to experiences generated from a range of involvements. He contends that most people experience addiction to some degree at least for periods of time during their lives. He does not view addictions as medical problems but as "problems of life" that most people overcome. The failure to do so is the exception rather than the rule, he argues.[9] This view opposes the brain disease model of addiction.

In his books on non-addictive child rearing, Addiction-Proof Your Child (2007) and Outgrowing Addiction (with child development specialist Zach Rhoads, 2019), Peele argues that the best antidote for addiction is raising independent children who are competent and who have pro-social, health-oriented values. These same profiles, along with socially privileged backgrounds, account for which young people are able to overcome whatever addictive episodes they have.

In a number of papers, as well as his 1989 book, Diseasing of America: Addiction Treatment Out of Control, Peele has argued that treatment— including as ideally administered in Project MATCH— is an inadequate, even iatrogenic, cultural response to addiction. This is particularly true, he finds, for disease treatments, since they diminish people's sense of themselves and their ability to change.

When it was published in 1975, Love and Addiction pre-dated by almost a decade the notion of sex addiction and codependency popularized by authors such as Patrick Carnes, whose Out of the Shadows, one of the earliest popular books to describe sex addiction, came out in 1983, and Melody Beattie, whose Codependent No More was published in 1986. Love and Addiction pre-dated the current popular use of the terms "sex addiction" and "codependency" to describe disorders of love attachment, as these terms were not part of Peele and Brodsky's nomenclature. However, because Love and Addiction was concerned with observing the same condition of addictive human attachments, it has been argued that this is the first book to be written on the subject of codependent relationships.[10]

In reviewing the legacy of Love and Addiction, psychologist Dr. Alex Kwee wrote:

"That experiences can be addictive was a prescient notion in 1975 as psychology now embraces the concept of the process (or behavioral) addictions such as pathological gambling, compulsive eating, and sex addiction. But it must surely be to Peele's dismay that instead of rethinking substance addiction as a medical illness, psychology has gone and classified the behaviors as addictions in the same medical sense and yielded the solution into the hands of the 12-Steps."[11]

Views on alcoholism

[edit]

Peele maintains that, depending on the person, abstinence or moderation are valid approaches to treat excessive drinking. In a Psychology Today article which compared the Life Process Program with the disease model,[12] he also argues against the theory proposed decades ago by modern physicians, mental health professionals, research scientists, etc. that addiction is a disease.[13] In Diseasing of America (1989), Peele contested Dr George Vaillant's pro-disease treatise The Natural History of Alcoholism.

Peele has been concerned with identifying cultural factors (those differentiating Temperance from non-Temperance societies) in support of positive alcohol experiences, as well as medical and psychological benefits due to positive drinking practices. Primarily, he has found, such drinking occurs where alcohol use is socialized in young people in family and community settings. He has also sought to generalize this paradigm to drug use.

Views on 12 step/disease treatment

[edit]

In a co-authored book, Resisting 12 Step Coercion (2001), Peele outlined his case against court mandated attendance of twelve-step drug and alcohol treatment programs. He argued that these treatment programs are useless and sometimes harmful, he presented research on alternative treatment options, and accused some addiction providers of routine violation of standard medical ethics, an accusation that is likewise often leveled at Peele by disease proponents.[14]

In The Truth About Addiction and Recovery (1991) and 7 Tools to Beat Addiction (2004), Peele laid out what he believes to be the elements of alternative treatment. He developed these ideas as the Life Process Program, which was the basis for a non-12 Step residential treatment program and is now offered as an online treatment resource by Dr. Peele and colleagues.[15]

Peele attributes the intensifying drug crisis in the US to the continuing acceptance and spread of the disease model of addiction in both its 12-step and brain disease forms since, he feels, the disease model undercuts the sense of self-efficacy that characterizes positive, controlled substance use.

Criticism

[edit]

In a review of The Meaning of Addiction, addiction researcher Dr Griffith Edwards stated the following about Peele's work:

"With these and other issues treated in cavalier fashion, with referencing highly incomplete and crucial work often ignored, one begins to feel that this is a book where polemic and scholarship have become inextricably and unhappily mixed. [...] Peele is not only a psychologist of distinction, but someone who can make use of sociological and biological ideas. [...] So there's the dilemma."

— Griffith Edwards, Review of The Meaning of Addiction.[16]

Recognition

[edit]

Stanton Peele has done as much as anyone to reveal the inadequacies, absurdities, and injustices of the idea that addiction is a disease and, specifically, that it is a disease of the brain. In a constant flow of influential books, articles, and blogs over more than forty years, he has persuasively extended the critique of the disease theory of addiction beyond the scientific community to the general public. When the disease theory is eventually replaced by a more rational and humane approach in the popular understanding of addiction, Stanton Peele will be first in line to receive the plaudits, and those of us who broadly share his view will owe him a profound debt of gratitude.

— Nick Heather, PhD, Emeritus Professor of Alcohol & Other Drug Studies, Northumbria University, UK; co-editor, Evaluating the Brain Disease Model of Addiction.
  • 1989: Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies Mark Keller Award for Alcohol Studies for his article "The limitations of control-of-supply models for explaining and preventing alcoholism and drug addiction," JSA, 48:61-77, 1987.[17]
  • 1994: Alfred R. Lindesmith Lifetime Achievement Award for Scholarship from the Drug Policy Foundation, Washington, DC,[18]
  • 1998: Creation of the Annual Stanton Peele Lecture, 1998, by the Addiction Studies Program, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia.
  • 2006: Lifetime Achievement Award, 2006, International Network on Personal Meaning, Vancouver.[1]

Funding

[edit]

Lindesmith Center (now the Drug Policy Alliance): grant to write an adolescent drug guide (1996).

The Distilled Spirits Council of the United States (DISCUS), and the Wine Institute provided unrestricted grants for research used in the journal article Exploring Psychological Benefits Associated with Moderate Alcohol Use: A Necessary Corrective to Assessments of Drinking Outcomes?[19]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Curriculum Vitae Stanton Peele". www.peele.net.
  2. ^ "My Fabulous Sports Career on the Mean Streets of Philadelphia". Psychology Today.
  3. ^ "Love Can Be An Addiction". www.peele.net.
  4. ^ "A DRUG-USERS' ADVOCATE" – via www.washingtonpost.com.
  5. ^ Glaser, Gabrielle (July 3, 2014). "A Different Path to Fighting Addiction (Published 2014)". The New York Times.
  6. ^ "@speele5" on Twitter
  7. ^ "Life-process model of addiction", Wikipedia, 2022-03-07, retrieved 2022-05-01
  8. ^ "Love and Addiction". www.peele.net.
  9. ^ "About Stanton Peele". www.peele.net.
  10. ^ Kwee, Alex (2007). "Constructing addiction from experience and context: Peele and Brodsky's Love and Addiction revisited" (PDF). Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention. 14 (3): 221–237. doi:10.1080/10720160701480535. S2CID 144242381. Retrieved January 11, 2015.
  11. ^ Kwee, Alex (2007). "Constructing addiction from experience and context: Peele and Brodsky's Love and Addiction revisited" (PDF). Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention. 14 (3): 221–237. doi:10.1080/10720160701480535. S2CID 144242381. Retrieved January 11, 2015.
  12. ^ "Recovering from an All-or-Nothing Approach to Alcohol". www.peele.net.
  13. ^ "Hungry for The Next Fix: Behind the relentless, misguided search for a medical cure for addiction". www.peele.net.
  14. ^ Peele, Stanton "Resisting 12 Step Coercion" Book Online : https://web.archive.org/web/20170407233750/http://www.morerevealed.com/library/resist/
  15. ^ "Online Program for Addiction Recovery | AA Alternative".
  16. ^ Griffith Edwards. The Meaning of Addiction (book review). British Journal of Addiction, Dec85, Vol. 80 Issue 4, p447-448.
  17. ^ "Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies". www.peele.net.
  18. ^ "Alfred R. Lindesmith Award for Achievement in Scholarship, Drug Policy Foundation". www.peele.net.
  19. ^ "Exploring Psychological Benefits Associated with Moderate Alcohol Use: A Necessary Corrective to Assessments of Drinking Outcomes?". www.peele.net.
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