Tough Times and the Ethnography of State Intimacies

IF 2.3 Q3 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Contemporary Drug Problems Pub Date : 2020-09-03 DOI:10.1177/0091450920956395
N. Campbell
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Abstract

Backlit by the flickering nightly display of #NYTough, a beacon projected onto the massive Empire State Government Plaza in Albany, New York, I read these two ethnographic encounters during the COVID-19 lockdown, a surreal experience for a scholar of drug policy, treatment, and science. Meant to showcase New Yorkers’ resilience, the slogan beamed its polysemic “tough love” signal across one of former New York State Governor Nelson Rockefeller’s monumental architectural follies. Far more consequential a folly has been the 1973 Rockefeller Laws, “get tough” drug laws mimicked throughout the United States’ “little Rockefeller laws” (Maggio, 2006). The Rockefeller Laws fueled mass incarceration with lengthy mandatory minimum sentences, and went unreformed until 2009 (Office of the New York State Governor, 2009). These laws provoked a particularly masculinist style of #NYTough law enforcement over more than 40 years’ existence, ensnaring a wide swath of New Yorkers—particularly poor persons of color—within the purview of the criminal justice system (Kohler-Hausman 2010, 2017). Reform set in motion an “evolving process in which a shift from punishment to treatment is occurring alongside a growing demand for treatment providers to meet the requirements of the criminal justice system” (Riggs et al., 2014). While the distinctly nontherapeutic criminalization process—which the Rockefeller Laws exemplify—will remain with the disunited states for a long time to come, experiments in therapeutic jurisprudence have yielded a system of “drug courts,” in which judges may exercise a degree of autonomy in sanctioning, while fostering relationships of emotional dependency with “participants” into whose lives they intrude deeply (Kaye, 2020, p. 66). This essay considers two recent U.S.-based books that reveal the inner workings of drug courts and prison-based treatment programs, situating each within the larger stakes of feminist drug ethnography and historiography. The scope of this review essay widened beyond the contribution each book makes to the ethnographic record to encompass the broader question of how states—those “coldest of all cold monsters” (Nietzsche, 1892/1930, p. 56)—respond to “unloved” subjects who use drugs. My purpose is to
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艰难时期与国家亲密关系的民族志
在每晚闪烁的#NYTough(投射在纽约奥尔巴尼大型帝国政府广场上的灯塔)的衬托下,我读到了新冠肺炎封锁期间的这两次人种学遭遇,对于一位研究药物政策、治疗和科学的学者来说,这是一次超现实的经历。为了展示纽约人的韧性,这句口号在前纽约州州长纳尔逊·洛克菲勒(Nelson Rockefeller)的一个不朽建筑愚蠢行为中传递了其多义的“坚韧的爱”信号。更重要的是1973年的洛克菲勒法律,该法律模仿了整个美国的“小洛克菲勒法律”(Maggio,2006)。洛克菲勒法律以冗长的强制性最低刑期助长了大规模监禁,直到2009年才得到修改(纽约州州长办公室,2009年)。这些法律在40多年的存在中引发了一种特别男性化的#NYTough执法风格,将大量纽约人——尤其是有色人种穷人——困在刑事司法系统的管辖范围内(Kohler Hausman 20102017)。改革启动了一个“从惩罚到治疗的不断演变的过程,同时对治疗提供者的需求不断增长,以满足刑事司法系统的要求”(Riggs等人,2014)。虽然洛克菲勒法律所体现的明显的非治疗性刑事定罪程序将在未来很长一段时间内继续存在于分裂的各州,但治疗法学的实验已经产生了一个“毒品法庭”系统,在这个系统中,法官可以在制裁方面行使一定程度的自主权,同时培养与“参与者”的情感依赖关系,他们深深地侵入了他们的生活(Kaye,2020,第66页)。本文考虑了美国最近出版的两本书,这两本书揭示了毒品法庭和监狱治疗项目的内部运作,将每一本书都置于女权主义毒品民族志和史学的更大利害关系中。这篇评论文章的范围超出了每本书对民族志记录的贡献,涵盖了更广泛的问题,即国家——那些“所有冷怪物中最冷的”(尼采,1892/1930,第56页)——如何应对吸毒的“不受欢迎”的受试者。我的目的是
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来源期刊
Contemporary Drug Problems
Contemporary Drug Problems Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Contemporary Drug Problems is a scholarly journal that publishes peer-reviewed social science research on alcohol and other psychoactive drugs, licit and illicit. The journal’s orientation is multidisciplinary and international; it is open to any research paper that contributes to social, cultural, historical or epidemiological knowledge and theory concerning drug use and related problems. While Contemporary Drug Problems publishes all types of social science research on alcohol and other drugs, it recognizes that innovative or challenging research can sometimes struggle to find a suitable outlet. The journal therefore particularly welcomes original studies for which publication options are limited, including historical research, qualitative studies, and policy and legal analyses. In terms of readership, Contemporary Drug Problems serves a burgeoning constituency of social researchers as well as policy makers and practitioners working in health, welfare, social services, public policy, criminal justice and law enforcement.
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