Resource landscapes for young people

leaving residential drug and alcohol services

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We seek to understand the resourcing opportunities of young people after exiting residential alcohol and drug (AOD) treatment, so to understand how resources are arranged and aligned in ways that maximise positive outcomes in young people’s substance use. We take a sociological approach to conceptualise ‘resources’ as those available through institutional systems, such as social, health and criminal justice services, and those accessible through personal networks and settings such as through bonds with family and peers, access to identities of worthiness, and ‘attitudes’ that reflect positive representations of self and future. The project provides innovative and detailed evidence about the resourcing needs of young people, informing the development of better models of care, reducing disparity and increasing the relevance of services to young people.

Our approach and method

The research conceptualises young people’s AOD treatment trajectories as socially produced sets of opportunities, not as individually authored journeys. This sociological approach represents a departure from existing AOD treatment research, which is dominated by epidemiologically and psychologically-informed studies that focus on young people’s deficits – their problems, ‘risky’ behaviours and disadvantages - and fail to take sufficient account of the profoundly social nature of substance use. We draw on longitudinal in-depth interviews with 38 young people in NSW and Victoria, who were interviewed at treatment exit and then again at six and twelve months.

  • Caluzzi, G., MacLean, S., Gray, R., Skattebol, J., Neale, J., Ferry, M., … Bryant, J. (2024). Opportunities and limits: exploring young people’s views of staff care in residential alcohol and other drug services. Journal of Youth Studies, 1–18.

    MacLean, S.J., Caluzzi, G., Ferry, M., Bruun, A., Sundbery, J., Skattebol J., Neale, J., Bryant, J. (2024). Young people returning to alcohol and other drug services as incremental treatment. Social Science & Medicine, 357: 117181 

    MacLean, S. J., Caluzzi, G., Ferry, M., Bruun, A., Skattebol, J., Neale, J., & Bryant, J. (2022). Why we stopped using the term ‘aftercare’. Drug and Alcohol Review, 41(1), 3-6.

    Bryant, J., Caluzzi, G., Bruun, A., Sundbery, J., Ferry, M., Gray, R. M., Skattebol J., MacLean, S. (2022). The problem of over-medicalisation: How AOD disease models perpetuate inequity for young people with multiple disadvantage. International Journal of Drug Policy, 103.

    Caluzzi, G., MacLean, S.J., Gray, R. M., Skattebol, J, Bryant J (2023). “I just wanted a change, a positive change”: Locating hope for young people engaged with residential alcohol and drug services in Victoria, Australia. Sociology of Health and Illness.

    Hopwood, M., Bryant, J., Neale, J., Caluzzi, G., Skattebol, J., & MacLean, S. (2024). Alcohol and other drug continuing care for young people: identifying helpful program mechanisms. International Journal of Adolescence and Youth, 29(1). 

    • Professor Joanne Bryant 
      School of Social Sciences, Sydney
    • School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, Centre for Alcohol Policy Research
      La Trobe University
    • Dr Jennifer Skattebol
      Transforming early Education And Child Health Research Centre
      Western Sydney University

    • Addictions Department, King’s College London
      Centre for Social Research in Health, Sydney
    • Centre for Alcohol Policy Research, La Trobe University
      School of Social Sciences, Sydney
    • Mr Mark Ferry
      Chief Operating Officer
      Ted Noffs Foundation
    • Mr Andrew Bruun
      Chief Executive Officer
      YSAS Youth Support and Advocacy Services
    • Dr Jacqui Sundbery
      YSAS Youth Support and Advocacy Services
  • Australian Research Council Discovery Grant DP200100492 ‘Aftercare for young people: A sociological study of resource opportunities’.