Penal-welfare systems in a (post)colonial world: The rise and disregard of alcohol and drug rehabilitation centers in South Africa

Mark Hunter
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Abstract

Apartheid South Africa developed a notoriously punitive and racist approach to alcohol and drug use. Less reported is that the state gave significant attention to rehabilitation, first for the minority white population and later for black South Africans. This paper asks why in the post-apartheid era—despite a huge influx of cheap heroin, methamphetamines, and other drugs—the government showed a relative disregard for rehabilitation. Addressing this question, the paper points to the configuration of forces driving public rehabilitation in the colonial era included the upliftment of “poor whites,” the need to maintain black workers’ productivity, and the ascendancy of the disease concept of addiction. In the post-1994 period these forces waned as a multiracial middle class came to purchase treatment in private rehabilitation facilities, the disease concept fell into retreat, and mass unemployment helped to position poor black drug users as an “undeserving poor.” The paper contributes to comparative studies on penal-welfare systems and the recent attention to drug histories from the global South.
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殖民地(后)世界的刑罚-福利制度:南非酗酒和吸毒康复中心的兴起与漠视
种族隔离制度下的南非对酗酒和吸毒采取了臭名昭著的惩罚性种族主义做法。较少报道的是,国家对康复给予了极大的关注,首先是针对少数白人,后来是针对南非黑人。本文探讨了为什么在后种族隔离时代,尽管廉价的海洛因、甲基苯丙胺和其他毒品大量涌入,但政府却相对忽视康复工作。针对这一问题,本文指出了殖民时代推动公共康复的各种力量,包括提高 "贫穷白人 "的地位、维持黑人工人生产力的需要以及吸毒成瘾这一疾病概念的兴起。在 1994 年后的时期,随着多种族中产阶级开始在私人康复机构购买治疗药物,这些力量逐渐减弱,疾病的概念也逐渐消退,而大规模失业则帮助将贫穷的黑人吸毒者定位为 "不值得帮助的穷人"。本文对刑罚-福利制度的比较研究以及最近对全球南方毒品历史的关注有所贡献。
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