Drugs and PoliticsPaul Elliott Rock Transaction Publishers, 1977 M01 1 - 331 pages Reconstructing and reporting the history of a social problem is always a diffi cult and speculative enterprise. Substantial areas of the problem may never have been recorded because they were covert or concealed. Those unknown areas form an uncertain context for interpreting the residue that was intentionally or unwittingly left for others to examine. The residue itself is composed of contributions made by people who were often engaged in masking or transforming the possible signifi cance of what they were doing. The worlds of legislators, control agents, and deviants tend to be complex, ambiguous, and marked by internal contradiction. They revolve around practices that are variously discredited or discreditable; designed for very diverse audiences; expressly public or intensely private; and shaped by confl icting, perhaps irreconcilable, imperatives and principles. Each practice assumes a different meaning when it is individually evaluated. Only a few facets of such worlds will ever become visible, they are politically laden, and those facets that can be inspected must be treated circumspectly. |
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Page 5
... Legislation in the United States John A. Clausen 2 Bureaucracy and Morality : An Organizational Perspective on a Moral Crusade Donald T. Dickson 3 The Marihuana Tax Act Howard S. Becker 4 On Capturing an Opium King : The Politics of Law ...
... Legislation in the United States John A. Clausen 2 Bureaucracy and Morality : An Organizational Perspective on a Moral Crusade Donald T. Dickson 3 The Marihuana Tax Act Howard S. Becker 4 On Capturing an Opium King : The Politics of Law ...
Page 11
... legislation and social control also fractured . During the 1960s , an elective affinity emerged between the world of drugtaking and the world of the relatively unburdened interpreters . The widely communicated alter- natives to the ...
... legislation and social control also fractured . During the 1960s , an elective affinity emerged between the world of drugtaking and the world of the relatively unburdened interpreters . The widely communicated alter- natives to the ...
Page 17
... legislation and control agencies . The medical , psychiatric , and legal professions are awarded substantial command ... legislative intent and they can bestow legitimacy on law . Their work was no simple mirroring of legislative ...
... legislation and control agencies . The medical , psychiatric , and legal professions are awarded substantial command ... legislative intent and they can bestow legitimacy on law . Their work was no simple mirroring of legislative ...
Page 18
... legislative and enforcement policies . This defection was not uniform , but it led to an important fusion between the different sources of subversion . Thus , the American Bar Association supported work such as William Eldridge's ...
... legislative and enforcement policies . This defection was not uniform , but it led to an important fusion between the different sources of subversion . Thus , the American Bar Association supported work such as William Eldridge's ...
Page 22
... ] Evolution by J. Hochman , Contemporary Sociology 3 , no . 5 ( September 1974 ) : 457 . 3. Quoted in New York Times , 20 November 1974 . 1 Early History of Narcotics Use and Narcotics Legislation in. 22 DRUGS AND POLITICS.
... ] Evolution by J. Hochman , Contemporary Sociology 3 , no . 5 ( September 1974 ) : 457 . 3. Quoted in New York Times , 20 November 1974 . 1 Early History of Narcotics Use and Narcotics Legislation in. 22 DRUGS AND POLITICS.
Contents
7 | |
23 | |
31 | |
The Marihuana Tax Act Howard S Becker | 55 |
The Politics | 67 |
The Drug Addict as a Folk Devil | 89 |
The Police as Amplifiers of Deviancy | 99 |
Methadones Rise and Fall Andrew Moss | 135 |
Phases of a Ghetto Career | 191 |
Street Status and Drug Use Harvey Feldman | 207 |
A Collective Portrait | 223 |
The Culture of Civility Howard S Becker | 233 |
The Helping | 247 |
Cannabis Alcohol and the Management | 261 |
Some | 279 |
Contributors | 311 |
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activities agencies agents alcohol American Anslinger appeared arrest associated attempt barbiturates Becker become behavior Bureau of Narcotics bureaucratic Burmese government cannabis chemical warfare communists corruption cough medicine create crime criminal culture dealers dealing deviant Drug Abuse drug addiction drug users drugtaking enforcement example federal force Harrison Act heroin heroin addiction illegal illicit drug illicit markets increase individual interests interpretation involved Jimmy Yang Knapp Commission knowledge Kokang Law's legislation legitimate licit major marihuana smoker Marihuana Tax Act marihuana user mass media methadone maintenance methadone programs militia moral moral panic Narcotic Addiction occur officers opiates opium organization patient percent person physicians police political problem produce pusher reaction regulations regulatory reported San Francisco sellers Shan rebel side effects smoking society sociology solid guys stereotype street Thai Thailand tion treatment U.S. Treasury Department United York young youth
Popular passages
Page 42 - addicts" and does not undertake to prescribe methods for their medical treatment. They are diseased and proper subjects for such treatment, and we cannot possibly conclude that a physician acted improperly or unwisely or for other than medical purposes...
Page 64 - Wherever rules are created and applied, we should be alive to the possible presence of an enterprising individual or group. Their activities can properly be called moral enterprise, for what they are enterprising about is the creation of a new fragment of the moral constitution of society, its code of right and wrong.
Page 28 - The opinion cannot be accepted as authority for holding that a physician who acts bona fide and according to fair medical standards, may never give an addict moderate amounts of drugs for self-administration in order to relieve conditions incident to addiction.
Page 58 - Indian hemp, and more attention has been focused upon specific cases reported of the abuse of the drug than would otherwise have been the case. This publicity tends to magnify the extent of the evil and lends color to an inference that there is an alarming spread of the improper use of the drug, whereas the actual increase in such use may...
Page 113 - HIPPIE THUGS - THE SORDID TRUTH: Drugtaking, couples making love while others look on, rule by a heavy mob armed with iron bars, foul language, filth, and stench, THAT is the scene inside the hippies' fortress in London's Piccadilly.
Page 236 - Deviance," like conforming behavior, is highly selective. San Francisco's culture of civility, accepting that premise, assumes that if I know that you steal or take dope or peddle your ass, that is all I know. There may be more to know; then again, there may be nothing. The deviant may be perfectly decent in every other respect. We are often enjoined, in a generalization of therapeutic doctrine, to treat other people as individuals; that prescription comes nearer to being filled in San Francisco...
Page 59 - In 1932, the Conference approved a draft law. The Bureau commented: The present constitutional limitations would seem to require control measures directed against the intrastate traffic in Indian hemp to be adopted by the several State governments rather than by the Federal Government, and the policy has been to urge the State authorities generally to provide the necessary legislation, with supporting enforcement activity, to prohibit the traffic except for bona fide medical purposes. The proposed...
Page 27 - Armed with what came to be known as the Behrman indictment, the Narcotics Division launched a reign of terror. Doctors were bullied and threatened, and those who were adamant went to prison. Any prescribing for an addict, unless he had some other ailment that called for narcotization, was likely to mean trouble with the Treasury agents. The addict-patient vanished; the addict-criminal emerged in his place. Instead of policing a small domain of petty stamp-tax chisellers, the Narcotics Division expanded...
Page 58 - While it is, of course, difficult to know what the motives of Bureau officials were, we need assume no more than that they perceived an area of wrongdoing that properly belonged in their jurisdiction and moved to put it there. The personal interest they satisfied in pressing for marihuana legislation was one common to many officials: the interest in successfully accomplishing the task one has been assigned and in acquiring the best tools with which to accomplish it.
References to this book
Clinical Textbook of Addictive Disorders, Third Edition Richard J. Frances,Sheldon I. Miller,Avram H. Mack No preview available - 2005 |