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Troubled: The Failed Promise of Americas Behavioral Treatment Programs

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Troubled: The Failed Promise of Americas Behavioral Treatment Programs

Contributors:

By (Author) Kenneth R. Rosen

ISBN:

9781542022118

Publisher:

Amazon Publishing

Imprint:

Little A

Publication Date:

8th December 2020

UK Publication Date:

12th January 2021

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

362.74

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

254

Description

An award-winning journalist's breathtaking mosaic of the tough-love industry and the young adults it inevitably fails. In the middle of the night, they are vanished. Each year thousands of young adults deemed out of control-suffering from depression, addiction, anxiety, and rage-are carted off against their will to remote wilderness programs

Reviews

A New York Times Book to Watch For Next Big Idea Book Club Finalist Vol.1 Brooklyn Book of the Month Rosen takes impressive steps to mitigate his admitted biases. Rather than turn Troubled into a Boy, Interrupted-style memoir, he focuses on four other graduates of tough-love programs, using their stories as windows into three very different types of facility. Rosen says he approached dozens of former participants before finding people who were willing to open up, and he spent a number of years with each of them to understand them better. This alone turns Troubled into not just a work of extended empathy but a public service; these life stories, taken together, shine a light on an industry that has been able to thrive in darkness. The New York Times Newsweeks own Rosen draws on his own experience and more than 100 interviews in this brutally frank expose of Americas tough love programs, following four graduates on their journey to adulthood and revealing the disturbing truth about the redirection industry. Newsweek His narrativeanchored by four young adults sent to similar tough love environmentsshows that many programs inflict lasting damage on the people they claim to help. Ultimately, the book makes a strong case for reforming the practice. The New York Times The stories are enlightening and engaging even as they reveal the shady, often abusive tactics used to snap these troubled children into behaving in a way that society deems acceptable. This book is a necessary expos for any parent who has considered sending their child to one of these camps. Rosen also gives voice to the thousands who have gone through these programs, and the text should be helpful in encouraging them to speak out about their experiencesHighly charged personal stories coalesce into a frank disclosure about the forced redirection of wayward teenagers. Kirkus Reviews Kenneth Rosen visits the podcast to discuss his new book, Troubled: The Failed Promise of Americas Behavioral Treatment Programs. The book is an examination of the tough-love industry of wilderness camps and residential therapeutic programs for young people. Rosen himself, as a troubled teen, spent time at a few of these places, and his book strongly criticizes their methods. The New York Times Journalist Kenneth Rosen drew on personal experiences to write this investigative work of nonfiction. Troubled exposes the cycles of abuse and manipulation deployed at wilderness camps to reform troubled teens, many of whom are living with mental illness. Bustle Rosen experienced a few of the tough-love institutes that he writes about in this searing expos: wilderness camps and therapeutic programs that treat young substance abusers and troublemakers, largely unregulated. The New York Times In Troubled, Kenneth R. Rosen is the exact right Conrad to take us into the heart of this immense darkness. Rosens insight, rigor, and sympathy ensure this book will stand as the definitive treatment of this troubled, troubling industry. An experience you wont forget. Darin Strauss, author of Half a Life and The Queen of Tuesday Troubled is a searing chronicle of the unfortunate era of tough love programs for wayward American youth, told with detail and compassion, as well as an eloquent kind of well-merited rage. Luke Mogelson, contributing writer at the New Yorker Troubled by Kenneth R. Rosen is the first book written by a survivor to investigate the longer-term outcomes of adolescents who were subjected to this treatmentIf you are a parent considering seeking help for your teenager or a program survivor, I urge you to read this book and heed its lessons. Maia Szalavitz, author of Help at Any Cost Profoundly unsettling, Troubled reveals a tough-love industry in disarray. Kenneth R. Rosen combines brilliant reporting skills and brutal firsthand experience in this captivating read. Michael Harris, author of Solitude and The End of Absence Kenneth R. Rosen is a relentless reporter, and he provides a piercing view inside the disturbing, largely unregulated teen-rehabilitation industry. Rosen ensures you ask the question of what were doing to our nations children and who, and what, is in fact troubled. Sylvia A. Harvey, author of The Shadow System A vivid and eye-opening plea for reform. Rosen writes as a journalist, but also from personal experience, about getting kidnapped to live in the strange world of teenage behavioral boot campswhich is an industry in America with its own unsavory logic. Michael Scott Moore, author of The Desert and the Sea Troubled investigates the unregulated Wild West of programs that claim to treat delinquent teenagers but actually further traumatize and harm them. From wilderness programs to residential treatment centers, these institutions prey on desperate parents who believe their children can be scared straight. Kenneth Rosens heartbreaking, deeply reported book should be required reading for parents, therapists, educators, school consultants, and anyone concerned about the most vulnerable in our society: our children. Troubled follows four teens through four different programs, keenly documenting the resultant physical and mental abuse from those entrusted with their care. With a journalists eye and a former troubled teens heart, Rosen makes a powerful case for eliminating this cruel part of the school-to-prison pipeline. A powerful, revealing expose. Katherine Reynolds Lewis, author of The Good News About Bad Behavior

Author Bio

Kenneth R. Rosen has written for the New Yorker, the New York Times Magazine, VQR, and the Atlantic. He is a contributing writer at WIRED and the author of Bulletproof Vest. He spent six years at the New York Times, his hometown newspaper, and now divides his time between northern Italy and Massachusetts. For more information, visit www.kennethrrosen.com.

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