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Original Article

Stigma, problem drug use, and welfare state encounters: changing contours of stigmatization in the era of social investment

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Pages 277-284 | Received 09 Nov 2017, Accepted 30 Jul 2018, Published online: 10 Dec 2018
 

Abstract

Aim: This study examined the ways in which citizens who have self-identified as having problem drug use experienced welfare state encounters in Denmark and considered the findings in the context of the social investment paradigm.

Methods: We conducted qualitative interviews with 106 Danish citizens who identified as having a problem drug use. The interviews were transcribed and coded in Nvivo to classify different types of welfare state encounters experiences.

Results: Previous research has documented extensive prevalence of drug-related stigmatization in welfare state encounters; however, approximately two-thirds of the citizens in this study did not recount this kind of stigmatization as predominating. Three prevailing narratives were conveyed by these participants: (1) narratives describing encounters where welfare state authorities approached the participant as ‘a whole person,’ (2) narratives depicting encounters where the participants were submissive, and (3) narratives about welfare state authorities who discredited the significance of the participants' drug problems and imposed expectations considered unrealistic by the participants, e.g. expectations related to labor market performance. In the third type of encounter, participants experienced incongruence between their actual and virtual identities; not because problem drug use was granted master status but because their self-identified severe drug problems were downplayed by the welfare state authorities.

Conclusion: Encountering welfare state authorities who downplayed the importance of drug problems gave rise to a form of stigmatization which we conceptualize as ‘neo-stigmatization’ to emphasize the contrast to drug related stigmatization where the importance of drug use is elevated to the point of master status. Neo-stigmatization emerges as politically productive in the context of the social investment paradigm that increasingly ties social worth to labor market value. Alleviating neo-stigmatization requires a political-economic framework that recognizes the value of citizens as not just workers but also caregivers and care receivers.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank all of the citizens who participated in interviews for this study as well as the reviewers and journal editor for their very valuable feedback. The first author would like to thank Suzanne Fraser and her colleagues for the opportunity to visit the NDRI research environment in Melbourne initially inspiring this paper and Darin Weinberg for his insightful comments during a research stay at University of Cambridge on the first versions of the paper.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by The Danish Council for Independent Research [4182-00165], the National Board of Social Services and VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research.

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