Structural Deprivation, Rural Segregation, and Substance Use—A Hungarian Case Study

Sik, Domonkos ✉ [Sik, Domonkos (szociológia), author] Department of Social Theory (ELTE / ELTE TÁTK); Szécsi, Judit [Szécsi, Judit (szociális munka, ...), author] Department of Social Work (ELTE / ELTE TÁTK); Rácz, József [Rácz, József (Társadalomlélektan), author] Department of Counselling and School Psychology (ELTE / Pszich_Int); Department of Addictology (SU / FHS); Márton, Neogrády-Kiss [Neogrády-Kiss, Márton (Matematika), author] Department of Statistics (ELTE / ELTE TÁTK); Demetrovics, Zsolt [Demetrovics, Zsolt (Addiktológia), author] Department of Clinical Psychology and Addiction (ELTE / Pszich_Int); Kaló, Zsuzsa [Kaló, Zsuzsa (Kvalitatív kutatások), author] Department of Counselling and School Psychology (ELTE / Pszich_Int); Kapitány-Föveny, Máté [Kapitány-Fövény, Máté (Addiktológia), author] Department of Addictology (SU / FHS); Faculty of Health Sciences (SU); Kovács, Asztrik [Kovács, Asztrik (Pszichológia), author] Department of Counselling and School Psychology (ELTE / Pszich_Int)

English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
  • SJR Scopus - Psychiatry and Mental Health: Q1
Fundings:
  • (K135629)
Subjects:
  • Substance abuse
  • Sociology
New designer drugs are a major public health concern, particularly in disadvantaged, segregated communities. While the phenomenon is better understood in urban settings, it remains unexplored in rural areas. This gap explains our research rationale: an interdisciplinary survey was designed; the fieldwork took place in Hungary, in a segregated rural area ( n = 425), in 2022. The complex sociological-psychological-existential trap represented by rural segregation is characterized by the lack of prospects for change. As the individual’s attention is narrowed to the present, such a burdensome existence is managed through escapist strategies of substance use. Our research investigates whether substance use is a cause or a consequence of structural deprivation. K-means cluster analysis was used to differentiate between the idealtypical patterns of substance use (e.g. self-controlling vs. risk-taking) and abstinence (e.g. vulnerable vs. consistent); chi-square tests were used to map the structural background and trajectories leading from abstinence to substance use.
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2026-03-13 12:23