This book examines different aspects to drugs and drug use as variously constituted through state regulation and the law. It explains how and to what effect their legal status is contingent on place, thus open to contestation and change, linking people and policy from local to global contexts. This book was originally published as a special issu
Introduction
Stewart Williams & Barney Warf
The agricultural politics of Cannabis control in colonial and post-colonial sub-Saharan Africa
Chris Duval
The myth of the narco-state
Pierre-Arnaud Chouvy
From raki to ayran: regulating the place and practice of drinking in Turkey
Emine OE. Evered & Kyle T. Evered
Neoliberalism and the alcohol industry in Ireland
Julien Mercille
Colliding intervention in the spatial management of street-based injecting and drug related litter in public settings
Stephen Parkin
Space, scale and jurisdiction in health service provision for drug users: the legal geography of a supervised injecting facility
Stewart Williams
Political struggles on a frontier of harm reduction drug policy: geographies of constrained policy mobility
Andy Longhurst & Eugene McCann
Mobilizing drug policy activism: conference spaces, convergence spaces, and assemblage
Cristina Temenos
Conclusion
Barney Warf & Stewart Williams