Literature DB >> 19101132

Foucault on methadone: beyond biopower.

Helen Keane1.   

Abstract

This essay reviews four texts which critically analyse methadone maintenance therapy using Foucault as a key theoretical framework: [Friedman, J., & Alicea, M. (2001). Surviving heroin: Interviews with women in methadone clinics. Florida: University Press of Florida], [Bourgois, P. (2000). Disciplining addictions: The bio-politics of methadone and heroin in the United States. Culture Medicine and Psychiatry, 24, 165-195], [Bull, M. (2008). Governing the heroin trade: From treaties to treatment. Ashgate: Aldershot], and [Fraser, S., & valentine, k. (2008). Substance & substitution: Methadone subjects in liberal societies. New York: Palgrave Macmillan]. Taken together these works demonstrate one trajectory in the development of critical drug studies over the past decade. While all four view MMT as a regulatory technology which aims to create productive and obedient subjects, their understandings of the power relations of the clinic are quite distinct. The first two texts emphasise the social control of drug users, the third, issues of governmentality and liberal political practice, while the fourth engages with ontological questions about substances themselves. Thus while Foucauldian analysis has become familiar in social studies of drugs and alcohol, new uses for its conceptual tools continue to emerge.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19101132     DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2008.10.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Drug Policy        ISSN: 0955-3959


  6 in total

1.  Negotiating space & drug use in emergency shelters with peer witness injection programs within the context of an overdose crisis: A qualitative study.

Authors:  Geoff Bardwell; Jade Boyd; Thomas Kerr; Ryan McNeil
Journal:  Health Place       Date:  2018-07-27       Impact factor: 4.078

2.  Challenging biopower: "Liquid cuffs" and the "Junkie" habitus.

Authors:  Camila Gelpi-Acosta
Journal:  Drugs (Abingdon Engl)       Date:  2014-12

3.  "It's like 'liquid handcuffs": The effects of take-home dosing policies on Methadone Maintenance Treatment (MMT) patients' lives.

Authors:  David Frank; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; David C Perlman; Suzan M Walters; Laura Curran; Honoria Guarino
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2021-08-14

4.  A transition of power in opioid substitution treatment: Clinic managers' views on the consequences of a patient choice reform.

Authors:  Lisa Andersson
Journal:  Nordisk Alkohol Nark       Date:  2022-02-01

5.  A Users' Guide to 'Juice Bars' and 'Liquid Handcuffs': Fluid Negotiations of Subjectivity, Space and the Substance of Methadone Treatment.

Authors:  Christopher B R Smith
Journal:  Space Cult       Date:  2011-08-01

6.  High retention in an opioid agonist therapy project in Durban, South Africa: the role of best practice and social cohesion.

Authors:  Monique Marks; Andrew Scheibe; Shaun Shelly
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2020-04-15
  6 in total

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