Literature DB >> 26221058

Reducing risk, producing order: The surprisingly disciplinary world of needle exchange.

Katherine McLEAN.   

Abstract

Emphasizing the reduction of risk over the cessation of drug use, needle exchange in the United States is often condemned for coddling its participants. Declining the punitive measures or unwavering teleology of criminal justice and drug treatment approaches, harm-reduction measures in general are faulted by naysayers for their refusal to establish clear normative boundaries for behavior modification. This article will seek to subvert such critiques by describing the ways in which disciplinary technologies suffused one needle exchange program in New York City. Drawing upon 1 year of participant observation at "Bronx Harm Reduction," this article will consider how the "minor procedures" of disciplinary power first characterized by Foucault (1977) worked to shape and organize different user bodies in needle exchange; it will further employ the work of Mitchell Dean to reflect upon the connections between program-level "technologies of agency" and government-led "technologies of performance." While conceding the overarching disciplinary transformation of late harm reduction, this article is specifically interested in the ramifications of this trajectory within one specific time and place. Namely, it postulates that attempts to "raise the bar" within a low-threshold program may serve to alienate or explicitly exclude certain service users.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Foucault; Harm reduction; discipline; governance; needle exchange

Year:  2013        PMID: 26221058      PMCID: PMC4515428          DOI: 10.1177/009145091304000306

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Contemp Drug Probl        ISSN: 0091-4509


  10 in total

Review 1.  Disciplining addictions: the bio-politics of methadone and heroin in the United States.

Authors:  P Bourgois
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2000-06

2.  Governing street-based injecting drug users: a critique of heroin overdose prevention in Australia.

Authors:  David Moore
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2004-10       Impact factor: 4.634

3.  Social change and the control of psychotropic drugs-risk management, harm reduction and 'postmodernity'.

Authors:  S Mugford
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Rev       Date:  1993

Review 4.  Putting at risk what we know: reflecting on the drug-using subject in harm reduction and its political implications.

Authors:  David Moore; Suzanne Fraser
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2006-01-18       Impact factor: 4.634

Review 5.  The use of pleasure in harm reduction: perspectives from the history of sexuality.

Authors:  Kane Race
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2007-09-27

6.  How the harm reduction movement contrasts itself against punitive prohibition.

Authors:  Tuukka Tammi; Toivo Hurme
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2006-12-05

7.  Risk environments and drug harms: a social science for harm reduction approach.

Authors:  Tim Rhodes
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2009-01-14

8.  The New York Needle Trial: the politics of public health in the age of AIDS.

Authors:  W Anderson
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1991-11       Impact factor: 9.308

9.  Access to sterile syringes for injecting drug users in New York City: politics and perception (1984-2010).

Authors:  Daliah Heller; Denise Paone
Journal:  Subst Use Misuse       Date:  2011       Impact factor: 2.164

10.  Needle exchange and the geography of survival in the South Bronx.

Authors:  Katherine McLean
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2012-03-13
  10 in total
  1 in total

1.  The Significance of Harm Reduction as a Social and Health Care Intervention for Injecting Drug Users: An Exploratory Study of a Needle Exchange Program in Fresno, California.

Authors:  Kris Clarke; Debra Harris; John A Zweifler; Marc Lasher; Roger B Mortimer; Susan Hughes
Journal:  Soc Work Public Health       Date:  2016-05-11
  1 in total

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