High : drugs, desire, and a nation of users / Ingrid Walker.
Publisher: Seattle ; London : University of Washington Press, [2017]Copyright date: ©2017Edition: 1st EditionDescription: 220 pages : illustrations, charts ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- still image
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780295742311
- 0295742313
- 9780295742328
- 0295742321
- HV5825 .W38123 2017
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | HV5825 .W38123 2017 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001483303 |
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HV5825 .M69 2014 Drugs and drug policy : the control of consciousness alternation / | HV5825 .R484 2012 Blowing smoke : rethinking the war on drugs without prohibition and rehab / | HV5825 .T37 2012 Taking sides. Clashing views in drugs and society / | HV5825 .W38123 2017 High : drugs, desire, and a nation of users / | HV5825 .W56 1997 The electric kool-aid acid test / | HV5831 .I8 R43 2009 Methland : the death and life of an American small town / | HV5831 .W4 G37 2011 Policing methamphetamine : narcopolitics in rural America / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Preface: Breaking user silence -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: We are all users -- Picture a drug user -- Criminalization : winning the crusade but losing the war -- Medicalization : defining drug use -- Why we use : the pleasure and the eros of drugs -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Glossary -- Selected bibliography -- Index.
Whether drinking Red Bull, relieving chronic pain with oxycodone, or experimenting with Ecstasy, Americans participate in a culture of self-medication, using psychoactive substances to enhance or manage our moods. A "drug-free America" seems to be a fantasyland that most people don't want to inhabit. High: Drugs, Desire, and a Nation of Users asks fundamental questions about US drug policies and social norms. Why do we endorse the use of some drugs and criminalize others? Why do we accept the necessity of a doctor-prescribed opiate but not the same thing bought off the street? This divided approach shapes public policy, the justice system, research, social services, and health care. And despite the decades-old war on drugs, drug use remains relatively unchanged. Ingrid Walker speaks to the silencing effects of both criminalization and medicalization, incorporating first-person narratives to show a wide variety of user experiences with drugs. By challenging current thinking about drugs and users, Walker calls for a next wave of drug policy reform in the United States, beginning with recognizing the full spectrum of drug use practices"--Back cover blurb.
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