In Pills, Powder and Smoke: Inside the Bloody War on Drugs, Antony Loewenstein offers an expansive medley of facts, figures and accounts of life in the midst of the drug war, based on travels to six countries on five continents: Honduras, Guinea-Bissau, the Philippines, the UK, the US and Australia. While the book’s ambitious breadth means it sometimes struggles to draw rigorous interconnections, this is a well-intentioned and wide-ranging study that gives a voice to those caught up in the global ‘War on Drugs’, writes Alessandro Ford
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In Black Skin, White Masks - first published in 1952 - Frantz Fanon offers a potent philosophical, c...
In Radical War: Data, Attention and Control in the Twenty-First Century, Matthew Ford and Andrew Hos...
In The End of Asylum, Andrew I. Schoenholtz, Jaya Ramji-Nogales and Philip G. Schrag offer a new stu...
In Pills, Powder and Smoke: Inside the Bloody War on Drugs, Antony Loewenstein offers an expansive m...
In The Pound and the Fury: Why Anger and Confusion Reign in an Economy Paralysed by Myth, Jack Mosse...
In Barbed-Wire Imperialism: Britain’s Empire of Camps, 1876-1903, Aidan Forth presents a history of ...
In Little Platoons: How A Revived One Nation Can Empower England’s Forgotten Towns and Redraw The Po...
In The Nutmeg’s Curse: Parables for a Planet in Crisis, Amitav Ghosh explores the spice nutmeg as a ...
In 2013, a group of British aviation archaeologists began excavating in Myanmar in search of some 14...
In Agonies of Empire: American Power from Clinton to Biden, Michael Cox offers a selection of essays...
In Five Heads (Tavan Tolgoi): Art, Anthropology and Mongol Futurism, editor Hermione Spriggs brings ...
In New Pandemics, Old Politics: Two Hundred Years of War on Disease and its Alternatives, Alex de Wa...
Coinciding with the 75th anniversary of the Beveridge Report and written in the spirit of George Orw...
In Against Meritocracy: Culture, Power and Myths of Mobility, Jo Littler offers a rich analysis that...
‘Tomorrow Belong to Us’: The British Far Right since 1967, edited by Nigel Copsey and Matthew Worley...
In Black Skin, White Masks - first published in 1952 - Frantz Fanon offers a potent philosophical, c...
In Radical War: Data, Attention and Control in the Twenty-First Century, Matthew Ford and Andrew Hos...
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