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The War on People who Use Drugs
註釋Cover -- Half title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of figures -- Acknowledgements -- Glossary, acronyms, and abbreviations -- Introduction -- Sweden: a bastion of 'liberal' democracy? -- Eugenics, social engineering, sterilisations, containment, and control -- Methodology -- The foci of my research -- Moving into the People's Home -- Meeting respondents -- Interviews, consent, and confidentiality -- Presentation of research -- A brief (but important) note on language -- Overview of this book -- 1. Historical, legal, discursive precedent -- Moral panic in the People's Home: racism, HIV/AIDS, and drugs -- The commissions and remiss responses: creating a drug-free society -- Criminalising use -- Compulsory care -- International models: war on drugs vs drug law reform -- Creating consensus -- The roles of RNS, FMN, and RFHL in achieving consensus -- Absence of divergent voices -- Exclusions of drug users -- Summary: moral panic, consensus, and silencing -- 2. Reimagining drugs (and people who use them) -- Sending a signal and political posturing -- Drug use as disease, drug users as vectors -- Drug users: pathologisation and infantilisation -- Are all drugs bad? -- Swedish conflations -- Some drugs better than others: Swedish national drugs -- Alcohol -- Snus -- Summary: pathologisation and demonisation of drugs and people who use them -- 3. Dynamics and displacement of Swedish drug use -- Which drugs? -- Levels of drug use -- Levels of alcohol consumption -- Spaces: public drug scenes -- Making contact -- A displacement of drug dealing and of people who use drugs -- Broader projects of displacement and social engineering -- Summary: drug difficulties, displacement, containment, and control -- 4. Service provision and harm reduction -- Harm reduction -- The need for harm reduction -- Harm reduction strategies