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Harm reduction as anarchist practice : a user’s guide to capitalism and addiction in North America

journal contribution
posted on 2012-06-01, 00:00 authored by Christopher Smith
In spite of its origins as an illegal, clandestine, grassroots activity that took place either outside or in defiant opposition to state and legal authority, there is growing evidence to suggest that harm reduction in North America has become sanitized and depoliticized in its institutionalization as public health policy. Harm reduction remains the most contested and controversial aspect of drug policy on both sides of the Canada–US border, yet the institutionalization of harm reduction in each national context demonstrates a series of stark contrasts. Drawing from regional case study examples in Canada and the US, this article historically traces and politically re-maps the uneasy relationship between the autonomous political origins of harm reduction, contemporary public health policy, and the adoption of the biomedical model for addiction research and treatment in North America. Situated within a broader theoretical interrogation of the etiology of addiction, this study culminates in a politically engaged critique of traditional addiction research and drug/service user autonomy. Arguing that the founding philosophy and spirit of the harm reduction movement represents a fundamentally anarchist-inspired form of practice, this article concludes by considering tactics for reclaiming and re-politicizing the future of harm reduction in North America.

History

Journal

Critical public health

Volume

22

Issue

2

Pagination

209 - 221

Publisher

Routledge

Location

Philadelphia, Pa.

ISSN

0958-1596

eISSN

1469-3682

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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