Singer offers a fresh set of ideas for understanding how the global socioeconomic system insures that massive quantities of psychotropic drugs reach the poorest sectors of American society. Drugging the Poor provides a unified theoretical framework to assess how all drugs, including tobacco, heroin, alcohol, cocaine, and diverted pharmaceuticals contribute to maintaining social inequality among the wealthier and poorer social classes in American society. Singers analysis rejects conventional approaches that see tobacco or alcohol manufacturers and distributors, on the one hand, and drug cartels and mafias, on the other, as completely different entities. Instead, he shows how legal and illegal drug corporations share key features and follow the same economic principles. He also emphasizes that mixing legal and illegal drugs to self-medicate against social discrimination, poverty, and structural violence offers short-term relief, but in the long run, it functions to maintain an unjust and oppressive system. Drugging the Poor actively challenges the assumption that how things are is how they always have been or how they need to be.
Examines the sale and use of illegal drugs around the world, discussing the scale of the global drug trade, identifying some of the most widely known and used drugs, exploring the source and production of drugs, and looking at ways to ...
Drugs and Development: The Global Impact on Sustainable Growth and Human Rights
She had graduated high school and was studying elementary education at Mackenzie University in São Paulo. I loved the bohemian feel of the student body, the free and open forum of the classes, and the electric exchange of information ...
Behind the Eight Ball: Sex for Crack Cocaine Exchange and Poor Black Women documents an American tragedy that highlights the widening gap between social and economic classes.
David Crawford tells the great untold story of drug dealing in America, where white, middle-class dealers are unlikely to suffer the enforcement of drug laws.
... drugs. In his book, Drugging the Poor, Singer argues that both legal and illegal drugs “contribute to maintaining an unjust structure of social and economic relations” (2008a:230). This occurs in several ways. First, in pacifying poor ...
“The Normalization of 'Sensible' Recreational Drug Use: Further Evidence from the NorthWest England Longitudinal Study.” Sociology 36(4): 941–964. Parramore, Lynn Stuart. 2012. “Forbes 400 List Reveals Why the Greedy Rich Fully Deserve ...
This title examines one of the world's critical issues, drug trafficking.
... Drug Trades , 1500-1800 . " In The Oxford Handbook of Global Drug History edited by Paul Gootenberg , 113-132 . New York : Oxford University Press . Brunton , Ron . 1989. The Abandoned Narcotic : Kava and Cultural Instability in ...
Hall, S. 2002 Teen Abuse of Cold Drug on the Rise. ... Hammersley, R., F. Kahn, and J. Ditton 2002 Ecstasy and the Rise of the Chemical Generation. ... Hayner, G. 2002 MDMA Misrepresentation: An Unresolved Problem for Ecstasy Users.