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Phillip Love English 1102 Rebecca Agosta 10/28/13 Annotated Bibliography Alcohol Research & Health: The Journal

of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Rockville, Md.: Public Health Service, National Institutes of Health, 1999. Print. This article provides critical information on how genetics play an important role in alcoholism. It contains sufficient support for Gees N-identity perspective and will help to analyze and break down the condition. It also contains statistics of alcohol in the United States which is relative to understand the amount of people effected by the disease. This article provides information that is critical for the development of a statistical and identity based paper. The numbers provided in it were astonishing, saying that over five percent of Americans are effected by the disease. It also discusses how alcohol accounts for about three percent of deaths every year! The article also breaks down how alcoholism in family members effects each other and raises the chances for development of alcoholism in the others. This article is credible because it was published by the national health institute. Among other things, the national health institute provides many different articles for different diseases to help break them down. The source is widely recognized as a reliable source with accurate information.

Clinebell, Howard J. "Alcohol Problems: a Report to the Nation by the Cooperative Commission on the Study of Alcholism." Pastoral Psychology. 19.4 (1968): 57-59. Print. This resource offers varying information on the study of alcoholism. It discusses new techniques for treatment and root causes of the problem. This article will be important because it discusses how the church affects alcoholism, which is closely related to the institutional identity. The institutional identity may be one of the most important identities when dealing with alcoholism because it shows how the people that surround you help make you. This article was very interesting in the breakdown of the institutional identity. It helped to put into perspective how much impact institutions can have on alcoholism. It brings in one institution which is often over looked when it comes to alcohol; the church. It explains how the church is responsible for alcoholism and the psychology behind the people of alcoholistic life styles. This source is credible because it was published by the oxford university press and written by a student at a school of theology in California. It was also reviewed by a psychology and theology professor who determined it could be published because of the profound statements made in the research article. Gee, James. "Identity as an Analytic Lens for Research in Education." American Educational Research Association. Volume 25. (2000): 99-125. Print. This article includes a critical analysis on the viewpoint of four separate identity perspectives. It helps to break down specific aspects of a persons identity into smaller groups that make up the big picture. The different identities offer support through four different areas of perspective.

The N-Identity, D-identity, A-identity, and I-identities are four different perspectives used to label each person individually. They collectively help to break down and analyze all parts of a persons identity and ultimately help determine who they really are. By using the four identities, alcoholism can be broken down and analyzed on a person to person basis to help characterize the different traits and signs. This source is credible because it was produced by the American Educational Research Association, which is widely accepted as a source with validity. The AERA has produced many articles that help analyze certain things and break down different parts of educational research. Gifford, Maria. Alcoholism. Santa Barbara, Calif: Greenwood Press/ABC-CLIO, 2010. Print. Includes information about how alcohol was discovered and how alcoholism was discovered as a mental illness. It explores a wide variety of different information including how alcohol affects personal relationships, drunk driving, and the effects on the body. It goes in depth about the ongoing effects of alcoholism as well as how it affects each persons thinking. The resource also provides a clear explanation of how alcoholism was introduced as a disease and how it changes the way people think and perform and act. I have reviewed the information in this book that shows how alcoholism interferes with personal relationship. It really helps to identify and show how it alters the thinking and the way the brain works. One method of identification is when alcohol takes the place of something important in life. An example would be if I stayed home from class to drink. Although this does not explicitly make me an alcoholic, it could be an early sign of the

onset of alcoholism. This book helps to analyze and break down each different part of what an alcoholic is and how they think. This source is credible because it was published by the Greenwood Press, which is the shining star of university press standard. The information that is published by them is carefully reviewed by critics and editors until they feel that it is perfect.
"Defining Substance Use Disorders: Do We Really Need More Than Heavy Use?." Alcohol and Alcoholism. 48.6 (2013): 633-640. Web. 10 Nov. 2013. <http://alcalc.oxfordjournals.org/content/48/6/633.full>. "Genetics of Alcohol Use Disorders." National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. AR&H, n.d. Web. 17 Nov 2013. <http://www.niaaa.nih.gov/alcohol-health/overview-alcohol-consumption/alcoholuse-disorders/genetics-alcohol-use-disorders>.

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