Criminalization and Drug "Wars" or Medicalization and Health "Epidemics": How Race, Class, and Neoliberal Politics Influence Drug Laws

被引:24
|
作者
Dollar, Cindy Brooks [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ N Carolina, Dept Sociol, 337 Frank Porter Graham Bldg,POB 26170, Greensboro, NC 27402 USA
关键词
UNITED-STATES; METHAMPHETAMINE; INEQUALITY; GENDER; INCARCERATION; CONSTRUCTION; DISPARITIES; AMERICA; DISEASE; THREAT;
D O I
10.1007/s10612-018-9398-7
中图分类号
DF [法律]; D9 [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
This essay argues that race and class influence drug laws through politicized means. Crack-cocaine and methamphetamine production, sales, and use were met with criminalizing efforts because of their respective association with African Americans and poor Whites, two groups that have been differentially identified as threatening to hegemonic power. Despite some similarities in criminalizing outcomes, specific reactions differed. Crack-cocaine's publicized connection to violence resulted in extensive surveillance, arrest, and imprisonment. Attention surrounding methamphetamine, however, often linked the drug to safety hazards, including property explosions, physical distortions of users, and the pathology of un(der)employment. As a result, policing the methamphetamine problem increased detentions but not to the same extent as crack-cocaine. I contend that the current opioid epidemic has received more medicalized reactions due to opiate's association to middle- and upper-class Whitessocial groups that are traditionally protected. I conclude by proposing that despite nuanced and unique consequences of criminalizing and medicalizing responses, each reflects a neoliberalist agenda that seeks to diffuse social threat and reinforce prevailing inequalities.
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页码:305 / 327
页数:23
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