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Cured of the habit by force : the United States and the global campaign to punish drug consumers, 1898-1970
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Title
Cured
of the
habit
by
force
: the
United
States
and the
global
campaign
to
punish
drug
consumers
,
1898
-
1970
Creator
Smith, Nathaniel Lee.
Abstract
This
dissertation
asks
how a
punitive
response
to
non
-
medical
drug
use
came
into
force
across
the
globe
in the
twentieth
century
.
It
argues
that
U
.
S
.
officials
were the
authors
of that
punitive
approach
. They
forged
it
in
response
to
opium
smokers
in their
Philippine
colony
in the
early
1900s
as
part
of what they
regarded
as a
modern
and
progressive
solution
to a
moral
and
practical
problem
. The
Philippine
experience
served
in
turn
as the
basis
for a
punitive
model
abroad
.
Washington
organized
international
conferences
pushing
for
ironclad
clauses
in
treaties
and
sought
to
undercut
attempts
to
keep
non
-
medical
drug
use
legal
. The
international
outcome
of these
efforts
was
evident
by the
interwar
years
with the
rise
of a
global
punitive
regime
prompted
by
international
treaties
and
effected
through
national
legislation
and
reporting
. The
new
regime
survived
an
immediate
challenge
from
foreign
public
health
bureaucrats
who
proposed
to
deal
with
drug
consumers
as
patients
rather
than
prisoners
.
American
officials
overcame
this
challenge
by
advancing
specialized
incarceration
as a
cutting
-
edge
form
of
addiction
treatment
.
After
the
Second
World
War
the
U
.
S
.
government
was
more
active
than
ever
in
promoting
punishment
.
Congress
imposed
mandatory
incarceration
for
illegal
drug
possession
,
while
an
assertive
executive
branch
worked
to
consolidate
the
punitive
approach
overseas
by
pressuring
non
-
compliant
countries
and
tightening
treaty
terms
. A
global
wave
of
drug
consumerism
among
youth
in the
late
1960s
posed
the
second
serious
challenge
to the
regime
.
While
forcing
a
moderation
in the
penalties
in the
United
States
,
drug
consumerism
did
not
overwhelm
(or
even
significantly
alter
) the
punitive
regime
.
Most
governments
reacted
by
escalating
penalties
. The
American
punitive
approach
remained
the
international
norm
.
Repository
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library
Faculty Advisor
Chasteen, John Charles, 1955-
Date (Graduated)
2007-05;
Date (Title Page)
2007
Form General
Dissertations
Type (Thesis or Dissertation)
Dissertation
Language
English
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Level
Ph. D.;
Discipline
History
Department
History
Digital Collection
UNC
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Host
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
File Size
6.9 MB
Copyright Holder
Author
Usage Rights
The author has granted the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill a limited, non-exclusive right to make this publication available to the public. The author retains all other rights.
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