Reviews
Well written and readable, thought-provoking and well researched.
Padwa's comparative approach is a smart one, and he effectively shows the ways in which multiple influences, including social and cultural ones, can shape drug policy for decades or longer.
An engaging and well-written book... Drawing on literature and archival material from both sides of the English Channel, Social Poison offers a comparative perspective that has often been missing from the existing historiography of illicit drugs.
More comparative studies of this type would be very useful for historical scholarship about the opiates. Such accounts promise to be much more informative than the more usual advocacy-infused use of historical comparisons that have often been a feature of the popular drug policy literature.
This book will be of interest to anyone involved in the treatment of addiction.
This book is an excellent example of the value of fine-grained comparative study and a welcome addition to the growing body of work on drugs and addiction... Addiction continues to be a key social issue, and Social Poison is a persuasive reminder of the need for contemporary policymakers to take the long view and for historians actively to assist them in this enterprise.
Howard Padwa's Social Poison is a useful addition to existing work on the topic.
Elegantly written and thoughtfully arranged.
In contrast to other western nations, Britain treated narcotic addicts liberally for most of the twentieth century. Howard Padwa explains this famous anomaly by comparing the evolution of French and British policies. His insight is original and compelling: national self-perception is the key to national drug control.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction: A Tale of Two Drug Policies
1. Imagining the Meditative Nation: Constructing the Opium Experience
2. Anti-narcotic Nationalism: The Feared Consequences of Recreational
Acknowledgments
Introduction: A Tale of Two Drug Policies
1. Imagining the Meditative Nation: Constructing the Opium Experience
2. Anti-narcotic Nationalism: The Feared Consequences of Recreational Opiate Use
3. The Era of National Narcotics Control: The Drug Wars Begin
4. Control and Its Discontents: The Plight of Addicts under Opiate Control
Epilogue: Changes and Continuities
Notes
Index