The United States war on drugs has, for decades now, systematically targeted communities of color. This sustained attack on people of color is accomplished through the use of whiteness. Recently, mainstream news media and elected officials have called for a “gentler war on drugs” to address the opioid epidemic. While some may see this as a welcome change, we take a more critical view. Specifically, we examine the role of White women in two popular television series that feature narratives of addiction as a gendered instance of “white drug exceptionalism.” To do this, we conducted a systematic analysis of a narrative television show, Law & Order, and a reality-based show, Intervention, using nine seasons over the same time period (2000–2010)...
The nation is currently in the throes of an epidemic of opiate addiction. More Americans now die fro...
In one of the quietest but most significant social phenomena of our time, national statistics indica...
Media and government alike speak of the war on drugs as if it were a new phenomenon. In fact, drug...
The United States war on drugs has, for decades now, systematically targeted communities of color. T...
Purpose – Reality TV shows that feature embodied “transformations” are popular, including Interventi...
In the mid-1980s, during the national War on Drugs, crack cocaine emerged in our inner cities, add...
This study leverages critical race and legal epidemiological frameworks to illustrate the race-based...
During an historic re-articulation of incarceration in New York City, Refusing Rehabilitation: Outla...
Since the spike in numbers of women in prison in approximately the 1980s, female prisons have been p...
This study examines the experiences of women of color with an addiction in Chicago using a mixed-me...
The failure of American politics to appropriately address the harms of substance use and substance u...
The crack epidemic swept through the black community in the United States in the early 1980s. Despit...
This study examines how the media has been used to perpetuate White privilege in the criminal justic...
In 1989 Jennifer Johnson was convicted of delivering a controlled substance to a minor. That the min...
In September 2016, the city police department of East Liverpool, Ohio responded to an incident in wh...
The nation is currently in the throes of an epidemic of opiate addiction. More Americans now die fro...
In one of the quietest but most significant social phenomena of our time, national statistics indica...
Media and government alike speak of the war on drugs as if it were a new phenomenon. In fact, drug...
The United States war on drugs has, for decades now, systematically targeted communities of color. T...
Purpose – Reality TV shows that feature embodied “transformations” are popular, including Interventi...
In the mid-1980s, during the national War on Drugs, crack cocaine emerged in our inner cities, add...
This study leverages critical race and legal epidemiological frameworks to illustrate the race-based...
During an historic re-articulation of incarceration in New York City, Refusing Rehabilitation: Outla...
Since the spike in numbers of women in prison in approximately the 1980s, female prisons have been p...
This study examines the experiences of women of color with an addiction in Chicago using a mixed-me...
The failure of American politics to appropriately address the harms of substance use and substance u...
The crack epidemic swept through the black community in the United States in the early 1980s. Despit...
This study examines how the media has been used to perpetuate White privilege in the criminal justic...
In 1989 Jennifer Johnson was convicted of delivering a controlled substance to a minor. That the min...
In September 2016, the city police department of East Liverpool, Ohio responded to an incident in wh...
The nation is currently in the throes of an epidemic of opiate addiction. More Americans now die fro...
In one of the quietest but most significant social phenomena of our time, national statistics indica...
Media and government alike speak of the war on drugs as if it were a new phenomenon. In fact, drug...