Russo's book reliably demonstrates that the street functions as an institutional collider. From the beginning, his thesis is precise and limited: To understand and analyze the criteria of the police when they intervene with people affected by the consumption of psychotoxic substances.
The research earned the author his doctorate in Community Mental Health at the National University of Lanús. After deciding to revive it through the work of rewriting, he intelligently combined his light and humorous style, which evokes the best of the Chicago Sociological School, and the highlights of the academy: bibliographic saturation and a careful methodology.
Neither sclerosed nor invertebrate, with his pristine prose the author covers those central themes, although heterogeneous, on which his work gravitated, as a result of which the notion of dispersive prism acquires a determining v...read more