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Criminal Artefacts: Governing Drugs and Users
Coles
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Criminal Artefacts: Governing Drugs and Users in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $95.00


By None
Criminal Artefacts: Governing Drugs and Users in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $95.00
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Size: Hardcover
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Attitudes toward crime, criminals, and rehabilitation have shifted
considerably, yet the idea that there is a causal link between drug
addiction and crime prevails. As law reformers call for addiction
treatment as a remedy to the failing war on drugs, it is also time to
consider the serious implications of joining legal and therapeutic
practices in an assumedly benevolent bid to cure the offender.
Drawing on theoretical tools inspired by Foucault, Latour, and
Goffman, Criminal Artefacts casts doubt on the assumption that
drugs lie at the heart of crime. Case studies from drug treatment
courts and addiction treatment programs illustrate the tensions between
law and psychology, treatment and punishment, and conflicting theories
of addiction. By looking curiously on the criminal addict as an
artefact of criminal justice, this book asks us to question why the
criminalized drug user has become such a focus of contemporary criminal
justice practices.
This interdisciplinary book will appeal to students, academics, and
practitioners in law, social theory, criminology, criminal justice,
addictions, cultural studies, sociology, and science studies.
Attitudes toward crime, criminals, and rehabilitation have shifted
considerably, yet the idea that there is a causal link between drug
addiction and crime prevails. As law reformers call for addiction
treatment as a remedy to the failing war on drugs, it is also time to
consider the serious implications of joining legal and therapeutic
practices in an assumedly benevolent bid to cure the offender.
Drawing on theoretical tools inspired by Foucault, Latour, and
Goffman, Criminal Artefacts casts doubt on the assumption that
drugs lie at the heart of crime. Case studies from drug treatment
courts and addiction treatment programs illustrate the tensions between
law and psychology, treatment and punishment, and conflicting theories
of addiction. By looking curiously on the criminal addict as an
artefact of criminal justice, this book asks us to question why the
criminalized drug user has become such a focus of contemporary criminal
justice practices.
This interdisciplinary book will appeal to students, academics, and
practitioners in law, social theory, criminology, criminal justice,
addictions, cultural studies, sociology, and science studies.


















