
Ana I Jacome
Ana Jácome Rosenfeld is a Clinical and Forensic Psychologist, also a PhD in Social Sciences. Her research interests range from criminal psychology to addiction treatment, including clinical psychology, education, psychology of disaster, and risk management. Her experience includes consulting, pedagogic mediation, research, and teaching. She keeps a clinical and forensic psychology private practice.
Phone: +593995834262
Address: Paseo San Francisco
Phone: +593995834262
Address: Paseo San Francisco
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Papers by Ana I Jacome
informantes calificados como el medio estratégico para la obtención de la mejor
información posible. Los informantes, hombres y mujeres, hablaron con libertad, más quede su propia experiencia, de lo que era el centro en el que fueron internados. Sus
testimonios, que comprende los de aquellos que vivieron esa realidad en el mismo tiempo, constituye la materia prima de este informe.
Books by Ana I Jacome
addiction treatment center in Ecuador, a therapeutic community experiment which led to the creation of other, similar spaces throughout
the country. The study is divided into five chapters which tell the story
of drug policy in Ecuador. As a clinical psychologist with a master’s
degree in forensic psychology from a university in the United States, I
wondered why drug policy was mostly shaped by common beliefs and
representations, in complete disregard of scientific knowledge on the
subject. I had already observed childhood friends thrown into private
addiction treatment clinics, emerging with no visible change in their
condition, while many more went on with their occasional drug use
with no public or private consequences whatsoever. And yet, private
drug addiction clinics were never seriously evaluated in policy-making
circles. The public treatment center offered a unique opportunity to
study drug policies from a single space where law, policy, and institutions came together with popular public and private representations, within the history of a war and including active state repression.
informantes calificados como el medio estratégico para la obtención de la mejor
información posible. Los informantes, hombres y mujeres, hablaron con libertad, más quede su propia experiencia, de lo que era el centro en el que fueron internados. Sus
testimonios, que comprende los de aquellos que vivieron esa realidad en el mismo tiempo, constituye la materia prima de este informe.
addiction treatment center in Ecuador, a therapeutic community experiment which led to the creation of other, similar spaces throughout
the country. The study is divided into five chapters which tell the story
of drug policy in Ecuador. As a clinical psychologist with a master’s
degree in forensic psychology from a university in the United States, I
wondered why drug policy was mostly shaped by common beliefs and
representations, in complete disregard of scientific knowledge on the
subject. I had already observed childhood friends thrown into private
addiction treatment clinics, emerging with no visible change in their
condition, while many more went on with their occasional drug use
with no public or private consequences whatsoever. And yet, private
drug addiction clinics were never seriously evaluated in policy-making
circles. The public treatment center offered a unique opportunity to
study drug policies from a single space where law, policy, and institutions came together with popular public and private representations, within the history of a war and including active state repression.