This article extends contemporary debates surrounding drug taking and employment through exploring the importance of economic participation in UK anti-drug policy. Specifically, we undertake a critical discourse analysis (CDA) of recent drug-taking policy documents to demonstrate how key ideological repertoires position drug consumption as the antithesis of economic potential and the productive subject. Engaging with recent critiques of neoliberalism, we develop the concept of the ‘employable citizen’ to (i) capture the increasing regulation of working identities deemed viable or appropriate, and (ii) foreground the connections between the spaces of drug taking and employment. After analysing the taxonomies that connect drug taking and the ...
This article examines the place of the drug user in drug policy and practice in England since the 19...
Background: There is increasing support to include people who use drugs (PWUD) into debates about dr...
This paper provides a poststructuralist analysis of the cultural inscription of drug-using subjects ...
This article extends contemporary debates surrounding drug taking and employment through exploring t...
This article extends contemporary debates surrounding drug taking and employment through exploring ...
The New Labour government in Britain has introduced a major programme of welfare to work, known as t...
The concept of vulnerability is now deeply embedded in English drug policy, influential in governing...
This article is concerned with the claim made by the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) of the Un...
In 1997 New Labour came to power with a landslide victory. This period also marked a watershed for i...
Part of the government’s strategy for ‘Tackling drug misuse’ is to assist ‘people who have graduated...
"Drugs: Policy and Politics" is an accessible introduction to the links between drugs and social pol...
In the last decade, the number of people in drugs treatment in England has more than doubled to a to...
There are few topics that generate as much controversy and evoke such heated dissent than illicit dr...
International audienceThis paper focuses on the way drug users (DUs) play an active role in implemen...
Drugs, Crime and Public Health provides an accessible but critical discussion of recent policy on il...
This article examines the place of the drug user in drug policy and practice in England since the 19...
Background: There is increasing support to include people who use drugs (PWUD) into debates about dr...
This paper provides a poststructuralist analysis of the cultural inscription of drug-using subjects ...
This article extends contemporary debates surrounding drug taking and employment through exploring t...
This article extends contemporary debates surrounding drug taking and employment through exploring ...
The New Labour government in Britain has introduced a major programme of welfare to work, known as t...
The concept of vulnerability is now deeply embedded in English drug policy, influential in governing...
This article is concerned with the claim made by the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) of the Un...
In 1997 New Labour came to power with a landslide victory. This period also marked a watershed for i...
Part of the government’s strategy for ‘Tackling drug misuse’ is to assist ‘people who have graduated...
"Drugs: Policy and Politics" is an accessible introduction to the links between drugs and social pol...
In the last decade, the number of people in drugs treatment in England has more than doubled to a to...
There are few topics that generate as much controversy and evoke such heated dissent than illicit dr...
International audienceThis paper focuses on the way drug users (DUs) play an active role in implemen...
Drugs, Crime and Public Health provides an accessible but critical discussion of recent policy on il...
This article examines the place of the drug user in drug policy and practice in England since the 19...
Background: There is increasing support to include people who use drugs (PWUD) into debates about dr...
This paper provides a poststructuralist analysis of the cultural inscription of drug-using subjects ...