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More than a hundred years have passed since the adoption of the first prohibitionist laws on drugs. Increasingly, the edifice of international drug control and laws is vacillating under pressures of reform. Scholarship on drugs history and policy has had a tendency to look at the issue mostly in the Western hemisphere of the globe or to privilege Western narratives of drugs and drugs policy. This volume instead turns this approach upside down and makes an intellectual attempt to redefine the subject of drugs in the Global South. Opium, heroin, cannabis, hashish, methamphetamines and khat are among the drugs discussed in the contributions to the volume, which spans from Sub-Saharan Africa to Southeast Asia, including the Middle East, North Africa, Latin America and the Indian Subcontinent. The volume also makes a powerful case for an interdisciplinary approach to the study of drugs by juxtaposing the work of historians, political scientists, geographers, anthropologists and criminologists. Ultimately, this edited volume is a rich and diverse collection of new case studies, which opens up venues for further research.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Third World Quarterly.
Sommario
Foreword: Decolonising drug studies in an era of predatory accumulation
Philippe Bourgois 1.
Introduction: Spirit and being: interdisciplinary reflections on drugs across history and politics
Maziyar Ghiabi Part I: Genealogies of Drugs 2. Decolonising drugs in Asia: the case of cocaine in colonial India
James Mills 3. A diplomatic failure: the Mexican role in the demise of the 1940 Reglamento Federal de Toxicomanías
Isaac Campos 4. Drugs of choice, drugs of change: Egyptian consumption habits since the 1920s
Philip Robins Part II: Ethnographies of Drugs 5. Drug booms and busts: poverty and prosperity in a Nicaraguan narco-barrio
Dennis Rodgers 6. Maintaining disorder: the micropolitics of drugs policy in Iran
Maziyar Ghiabi 7. 'We Will Revive': addiction, spiritual warfare, and recovery in Latin America's cocaine production zone
Pablo Seward Delaporte Part III: Comparative Perspectives on Drug Wars 8. Fighting crime and maintaining order: shared worldviews of civilian and military elites in Brazil and Mexico
Anaís M. Passos 9. Turning deserts into flowers: settlement and poppy cultivation in southwest Afghanistan
David Mansfield 10. Quasilegality: khat, cannabis and Africa's drug laws
Neil Carrier and Gernot Klantschnig 11. Why do South-east Asian states choose to suppress opium? A cross-case comparison
James Windle
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Maziyar Ghiabi is Lecturer in Modern Iranian History at the University of Oxford, UK, and Titular Fellow at Wadham College, University of Oxford. Prior to this position, he was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Paris School of Advanced Studies in Social Sciences (EHESS), France, and a member of the Institut de Recherche Interdisciplinaire des Enjeux Sociaux (IRIS), France. Maziyar obtained his Doctorate in Politics at the University of Oxford (St Antony's College) where he was a Wellcome Trust Scholar in Society and Ethics (2013-2017). Besides working on drug policy, Maziyar has published on urban ethnography and history from below.
Riassunto
The book brings together a unique collection of case studies on illicit drugs in the Global South. From Iranian meth to Indian cocaine, it takes the reader through unexpected narratives and stories across time and space. This book originally published in a special issue in Third World Quarterly.