오디오북 라이프의 시작

격이 다른 오디오북 생활을 경험해보세요!

  • 언제든 손쉽게 구독해지 가능
  • 월정액 11900원 부터
  • 무제한 청취
  • 총 5만권 이상의 영/한 오디오북
  • 온가족을 위한 다양한 오디오북
지금 바로 시작해보세요!
kr all devices
Cover for Seeing Drugs: Modernization, Counterinsurgency, and U.S. Narcotics Control in the Third World, 1969-1976

Seeing Drugs: Modernization, Counterinsurgency, and U.S. Narcotics Control in the Third World, 1969-1976

언어학습
영어
형식
컬렉션

역사

A timely historical analysis of a persistent global problem

Since its declaration in the early 1970s, the American drug war has spanned the globe in a quest to stop the flow of illegal drugs into the United States. Explaining the conceptual framework within which policymakers understood illegal opium production and trafficking, Seeing Drugs examines the genesis of the war on drugs during the Nixon and Ford administrations when the United States developed the policies that set the parameters of subsequent American drug control abroad.

Faced with rising heroin use in the United States and the fear of drug-addicted Vietnam veterans carrying their affliction home and propelled by the belief that heroin addiction spreads like a contagious disease, U.S. officials identified three Third World nations—Thailand, Burma, and Mexico—as the primary sources of illegal narcotics servicing the American drug market. Author Daniel Weimer demonstrates that drug-control officials in these countries confronted a host of interlocking factors shaping the illicit narcotics trade and that, in response to these challenges, policymakers applied modernization and counterinsurgency theory to devise strategies to assist the Thai, Burmese, and Mexican governments in curbing drug trafficking. The Nixon and Ford administrations sincerely believed their policies could rein in the narcotics trade and diminish addiction within the United States. In the end, however, the drug war only guaranteed continued American intervention in the Third World, where the majority of illegal drug crops grew.

Through interdisciplinary and comparative analysis, Seeing Drugs examines the contours of the burgeoning drug war, the cultural significance of drugs and addiction, and their links to the formation of national identity within the United States, Thailand, Burma, and Mexico. By highlighting the prevalence of modernization and counterinsurgency discourse within drug-control policy, Weimer reveals an unexplored and important facet of the history of U.S–Third World interaction.

“Essential reading for anyone interested in both the history of U.S. drug policy and the process of modernization during the Cold War.” – William O. Walker III, author of Drug Control in the Americas and Opium and Foreign Policy

“Seeing Drugs explores the dramatic effects of post-1945 U.S. modernization and counterinsurgency efforts, joined with Cold War imperatives, on the United States’ war on drugs. The war on drugs was carried by American dollars, social scientists, officials, and technology into the poppy fields of Mexico, Thailand and Burma. Dan Weimer deftly demonstrates the layered ways in which beliefs about drugs as threat and symbol of antimodernism prompted Americans to forcibly transform drug-growing areas, sometimes with support from indigenous elites. His story, based on impressive research and capacious understanding of theory, reveals both the contradictions in the United States’ war on drugs as well as many reasons for its devastating effects. This work joins much of the most exciting new work in U.S. foreign relations, in taking serious interest in the transformative consequences of U.S. foreign policy for other nations. Seeing Drugs joins Al McCoy’s classic Politics of Heroin as a ‘must read’ for understanding the United States’ war on drugs.” - Anne L. Foster, author of Projections of Power: The United States and Europe in Colonial Southeast Asia, 1919-1941

“Weimer persuasively demonstrates that discourses of modernization and counterinsurgency helped to shape both U.S. counter-narcotics policy abroad and domestic drug policy at home along coercive lines. An important and timely book with much to teach us about the contradictions of the ‘war on drugs’ in Afghanistan, Colombia, and elsewhere.” – Brad Simpson, Princeton University

© 2011 The Kent State University Press (전자책): 9781612775326

출시일

전자책: 2011년 6월 15일

언제 어디서나 스토리텔

  • 국내 유일 해리포터 시리즈 오디오북

  • 5만권이상의 영어/한국어 오디오북

  • 키즈 모드(어린이 안전 환경)

  • 월정액 무제한 청취

  • 언제든 취소 및 해지 가능

  • 오프라인 액세스를 위한 도서 다운로드

인기

스토리텔 언리미티드

5만권 이상의 영어, 한국어 오디오북을 무제한 들어보세요

11900 원 /월

  • 사용자 1인

  • 무제한 청취

  • 언제든 해지하실 수 있어요

지금 바로 시작하기

패밀리

친구 또는 가족과 함께 오디오북을 즐기고 싶은 분들을 위해

매달 17900 원 원 부터

  • 2-3 계정

  • 무제한 청취

  • 언제든 해지하실 수 있어요

본인 + 1 가족 구성원2 개 계정

17900 원 /월

지금 바로 시작하기