Literature DB >> 33485741

Ontological journeys: The lifeworld of opium across the Afghan-Iranian border in/out of the pharmacy.

Maziyar Ghiabi1.   

Abstract

How can we conceive alternative policy models that embrace the empirical potentialities emerging from the lifeworld of drugs? The article reflects on this question, concluding that to reassess and to reinvent current policies on drugs, we need to think with a political ontology. Incidentally, the article also responds to the critique dismissing ontological inquiries as obstructing - or, at best, not informing - alternative drug policies. In an archaeological approach inspired by the work of Giorgio Agamben, the article unearths the case study of opium maintenance programme in Iran (1969-79), a forgotten policy experiment in an understudied and yet crucial geo-cultural environment for the global study of drugs. Mobilising the conceptual framework of ontological journeys, the article recomposes the lifeworld of opium within the horizons of transformative cultural practices, international borders, policy regimes and public ethics. Here, the materiality of drug consumption under the maintenance policy links with the changes in opium's transnational political economy and with shifting regimes of health and bioethical orthodoxy. Ontological journeys, hence, develop in a fluid space and time, making it possible to illuminate the lifeworld of drugs in places and times hitherto deserted by global policy studies. In building theoretical reflections upon a non-Western case, the article also incites the possibility of theory beyond Eurocentric knowledge and Euromerican cases. In this way, the article's purpose is to analyse the be-coming of opium beyond 'good' or 'evil', as a 'medicine' or a 'drug' and its real or perceived classification as 'licit' or 'illicit' across the Afghan-Iranian border. In conclusion, the article reflects upon the significance of this forgotten policy experiment, understood as an ontological journey, for contemporary drug policy and drug studies, but also for reinventing notions of care, welfare and health.
Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier B.V.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Afghanistan; Giorgio Agamben; Iran; Maintenance policy; Ontology; Opium; Social theory

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33485741      PMCID: PMC7611031          DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2021.103116

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


  28 in total

1.  General view of drug abuse in Iran and one-year report of outpatient treatment of opiate addiction in the city of Shiraz.

Authors:  M R Moharreri
Journal:  NIDA Res Monogr       Date:  1978

2.  The social life of drugs.

Authors:  Cameron Duff
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2013-01-23

3.  A study of authorized opium addiction in Shiraz city and Fars Province, Iran.

Authors:  A H Mehryar; M R Moharreri
Journal:  Br J Addict Alcohol Other Drugs       Date:  1978-03

4.  Critical realism and the 'ontological politics of drug policy'.

Authors:  Alex Stevens
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2020-05-21

5.  Opium in 20th-century Britain: pharmacists, regulation and the people.

Authors:  S Anderson; V Berridge
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2000-01       Impact factor: 6.526

6.  The becoming-methadone-body: on the onto-politics of health intervention translations.

Authors:  Tim Rhodes; Lyuba Azbel; Kari Lancaster; Jaimie Meyer
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2019-07-16

7.  The becoming of methadone in Kenya: How an intervention's implementation constitutes recovery potential.

Authors:  Tim Rhodes
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2018-02-10       Impact factor: 4.634

8.  Drug use and risk behaviour profile, and the prevalence of HIV, hepatitis C and hepatitis B among people with methamphetamine use in Iran.

Authors:  Ghobad Moradi; Behzad Hajarizadeh; Khaled Rahmani; Amjad Mohamadi-Bolbanabad; Sonia Darvishi; Bushra Zareie; Fatemeh Azimian Zavareh; Heidar Sharafi; Seyed Moayed Alavian; Rashid Ramazani; Mehrdad Eftekhar; Seyed Ramin Radfar; Bakhtiar Piroozi; Mohammad-Mehdi Gouya
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2019-10-22

9.  The Effectiveness of Harm Reduction Programs in Seven Prisons of Iran.

Authors:  Payam Roshanfekr; Marziyeh Farnia; Masoumeh Dejman
Journal:  Iran J Public Health       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 1.429

10.  Decolonising drugs in Asia: the case of cocaine in colonial India.

Authors:  James Mills
Journal:  Third World Q       Date:  2017-08-30
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