Legalising the Drug Wars: A Regulatory History of UN Drug Control

Author:   John Collins
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781316512326


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   02 December 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Legalising the Drug Wars: A Regulatory History of UN Drug Control


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Full Product Details

Author:   John Collins
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.70cm , Height: 2.90cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.480kg
ISBN:  

9781316512326


ISBN 10:   1316512320
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   02 December 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

1. Drug diplomacy from the Opium Wars through the League of Nations, 1839–1939; 2. International drug control in wartime, 1939–1945; 3. Creating the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs, 1945–1946; 4. Reconstructing drug control in Europe, Asia and the Middle East; 5. Old battles anew at the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs, 1946–1948; 6. Dividing up the global licit market, 1948–1953; 7. From the 1953 protocol to the 1961 single convention; 8. Assessing the legal legacy of the single convention.

Reviews

'Drug wars come not just from populist politicians or prohibitionists, but from a complex and contested international regulatory system more than a century in the making. John Collins gives us a lucid and subtly revisionist history of the international drug-control system, and explores its implications for current drug-policy debates. Based on prodigious archival research and years of engagement in the field, this book is indispensable for anyone seeking to understand the politics of global drug regulation and its consequences for our own time.' David T. Courtwright, author of Forces of Habit and The Age of Addiction 'The origins and evolution of the global drug wars remain largely unexplored in the field of international relations. Dr Collins has filled a big gap in the literature in a work that encompasses both theory and history of international relations to explain how multilateral and national drug policies developed over the last century. In a time of rapid policy flux within global institutions more broadly, and drug policy specifically, this book is a timely and highly important work.' Michael Cox, Founding Director LSE IDEAS 'The first history of the 1961 Single Convention, the bedrock of modern international drug control. Archival research and his own engagement with the current UN drug-control system give John Collins a unique position, straddling history and policy. Collins shows that the system which emerged from the old colonial powers in Europe after World War Two is not just the vehicle for US prohibition, but a much more complex and malleable regulatory system.' Virginia Berridge, Department of Public Health, Environments and Society, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine 'The global drug control regime is in flux right now, challenged by cannabis legalization on the one hand and by the growing array of New Psychoactive Substances such as fentanyl analogues on the other. John Collins' new history of the emergence of that regime, which has prevailed largely unchanged for 60 years, demonstrates just how contested it was from the beginning. The sharply prohibitionist interpretation of many decades was a choice, not a requirement. The book presents a great deal of fresh evidence.' Peter Reuter, Distinguished University Professor, School of Public Policy and Department of Criminology, University of Maryland 'This book is a timely and important history of an issue of immense global importance. For countries that feel like they have been cycling a stationary bike for many decades fighting the war on drugs it is important to go back and look to the origins of the current set of policies in order to understand how they can be changed. This book provides key insights and explanations for policy choices that we now take for granted but should be viewed through a new lens of science and policy pragmatism.' Juan Manuel Santos, Former President of Colombia, Nobel Prize Laureate and Member of the Global Commission on Drug Policy


'Drug wars come not just from populist politicians or prohibitionists, but from a complex and contested international regulatory system more than a century in the making. John Collins gives us a lucid and subtly revisionist history of the international drug-control system, and explores its implications for current drug-policy debates. Based on prodigious archival research and years of engagement in the field, this book is indispensable for anyone seeking to understand the politics of global drug regulation and its consequences for our own time.' David T. Courtwright, author of Forces of Habit and The Age of Addiction 'The first history of the 1961 Single Convention, the bedrock of modern international drug control. Archival research and his own engagement with the current UN drug-control system give John Collins a unique position, straddling history and policy. Collins shows that the system which emerged from the old colonial powers in Europe after World War Two is not just the vehicle for US prohibition, but a much more complex and malleable regulatory system.' Virginia Berridge, Department of Public Health, Environments and Society, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine 'The global drug control regime is in flux right now, challenged by cannabis legalization on the one hand and by the growing array of New Psychoactive Substances such as fentanyl analogues on the other. John Collins' new history of the emergence of that regime, which has prevailed largely unchanged for 60 years, demonstrates just how contested it was from the beginning. The sharply prohibitionist interpretation of many decades was a choice, not a requirement. The book presents a great deal of fresh evidence.' Peter Reuter, Distinguished University Professor, School of Public Policy and Department of Criminology, University of Maryland 'The origins and evolution of the global drug wars remain largely unexplored in the field of international relations. Dr Collins has filled a big gap in the literature in a work that encompasses both theory and history of international relations to explain how multilateral and national drug policies developed over the last century. In a time of rapid policy flux within global institutions more broadly, and drug policy specifically, this book is a timely and highly important work.' Michael Cox, Founding Director LSE IDEAS


'Drug wars come not just from populist politicians or prohibitionists, but from a complex and contested international regulatory system more than a century in the making. John Collins gives us a lucid and subtly revisionist history of the international drug-control system, and explores its implications for current drug-policy debates. Based on prodigious archival research and years of engagement in the field, this book is indispensable for anyone seeking to understand the politics of global drug regulation and its consequences for our own time.' David T. Courtwright, author of Forces of Habit and The Age of Addiction 'The origins and evolution of the global drug wars remain largely unexplored in the field of international relations. Dr Collins has filled a big gap in the literature in a work that encompasses both theory and history of international relations to explain how multilateral and national drug policies developed over the last century. In a time of rapid policy flux within global institutions more broadly, and drug policy specifically, this book is a timely and highly important work.' Michael Cox, Founding Director LSE IDEAS 'The first history of the 1961 Single Convention, the bedrock of modern international drug control. Archival research and his own engagement with the current UN drug-control system give John Collins a unique position, straddling history and policy. Collins shows that the system which emerged from the old colonial powers in Europe after World War Two is not just the vehicle for US prohibition, but a much more complex and malleable regulatory system.' Virginia Berridge, Department of Public Health, Environments and Society, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine 'The global drug control regime is in flux right now, challenged by cannabis legalization on the one hand and by the growing array of New Psychoactive Substances such as fentanyl analogues on the other. John Collins' new history of the emergence of that regime, which has prevailed largely unchanged for 60 years, demonstrates just how contested it was from the beginning. The sharply prohibitionist interpretation of many decades was a choice, not a requirement. The book presents a great deal of fresh evidence.' Peter Reuter, Distinguished University Professor, School of Public Policy and Department of Criminology, University of Maryland


Author Information

John Collins is Director of Academic Engagement, the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime, Vienna. He is also a Fellow at the University of Hong Kong, and Editor-in-Chief for the Journal of Illicit Economies and Development, LSE Press. John's contemporary policy interests focus on the political economy of international drug control and the evolving dynamics on national and international policy reforms.

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