Chilling Out: The Cultural Politics of Substance Consumption, Youth and Drug PolicyMcGraw-Hill Education (UK), 2004 M07 1 - 227 páginas This book critically examines the assumptions underlying drug prohibition and explores the contradictions of drug prevention policies. For the first time in this field, it combines a wide-ranging exploration of the global political and historical context with a detailed focus on youth culture, on the basis that young people are the primary target of drug prevention policies. |
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
Chapter 01 Drug prohibition and the assassin of youth | 7 |
Chapter 02 Pleasure doomed | 28 |
Chapter 03 Drugs as cultural commodities | 52 |
Chapter 04 Youth subcultural theory | 104 |
Chapter 05 Drug normalization | 127 |
Chapter 06 Schooling and substances | 148 |
Chapter 07 British drug reform | 169 |
Notes | 188 |
Bibliography | 201 |
224 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Chilling Out: The Cultural Politics of Substance Consumption, Youth and Drug ... Shane J. Blackman Vista de fragmentos - 2004 |
Chilling Out: The Cultural Politics of Substance Consumption, Youth and Drug ... Shane J. Blackman Vista de fragmentos - 2004 |
Términos y frases comunes
addiction advertisement American Anslinger anti-drug approach argues assassin of youth basis Beatles behaviour Britain British drug British System cocaine commodities concept of subculture consumer contemporary criminal critical dance culture death defined described deviance dominant drug consumption drug control drug culture drug education drug hero drug normalization drug policy drug prevention drug prohibition drug references drug representations drug tourism drug users Drug-Free Society economic ecstasy example experience figures film first global groups hemp heroin Hollywood Home Office identified images individual influence intervention intoxication Klaus Barbie Leah Betts linked London marijuana means medical cannabis military moral Narcotics Noel Gallagher official opium peer education people’s political popular music poster postmodern Postmodern subcultural Press production profit programme promote Rachel Whitear recreational drug reflect scientific sexual social song specifies strategy subcultural theory suggests tabloid theory of subculture tion twenty-first century young women youth culture