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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
In The Prescription-to-Prison Pipeline Michelle Smirnova argues that the ongoing opioid drug epidemic is the result of an endless cycle in which suffering is medicalized and drug use is criminalized. Drawing on interviews with eighty incarcerated individuals in Missouri correctional institutions, Smirnova shows how contradictions in medical practices, social ideals, and legal policies disproportionately criminalize the poor for their social condition. This criminalization further exacerbates and perpetuates drug addiction and poverty. Tracing the processes by which social issues are constructed as biomedical ones that necessitate pharmacological intervention, Smirnova highlights how inequitable surveillance, policing, and punishment of marginalized populations intensify harms associated with both treatment and punishment, especially given that the distinctions between the two have become blurred. By focusing on the stories of people whose pain and pharmaceutical treatment led to incarceration, Smirnova challenges the binary of individual and social problems, effectively exploring how the conceptualization, diagnosis, and treatment of substance use may exacerbate outcomes such as relapse, recidivism, poverty, abuse, and death.
Contents:
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Quick Fixes to Enduring Problems 1
1. The Medicalization and Criminalization of Pain 27
2. Prescription: Getting Hooked 45
3. Pipeline: Sorting Use from Abuse 63
4. Prison: From Medicalization to Criminalization 79
Conclusions: When Medicine Becomes a Drug 93
Appendix: Methodological Note 111
Notes 121
Bibliography 135
Index 153
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: March, 2023
Pages: 184
Weight: 408g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Public Health