The Changing Face of the War on Drugs in the U.S.
Drug abuse has been defined as a significant social problem. This discussion provides an opportunity to examine this problem as well as the ways in which our reliance on punishment as a solution to drug abuse has changed over the years, given the different populations now impacted by the problem.
For this discussion, review the following resources:
- Race, poverty and punishment: The impact of criminal sanctions on racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic inequality (Links to an external site.)
- Opiate Addiction: Sociologists Construct Distinct Profiles For Heroin And Prescription Painkiller Users (Links to an external site.)
- War on Drugs Failure Gives Way To Treatment in States, Cities (Links to an external site.)
- Race, poverty and punishment: The impact of criminal sanctions on racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic inequality
- When Addiction has a White Face (Links to an external site.)
- Recommended: Chasing Heroin (Links to an external site.) (for transcript click here (Links to an external site.))
After reviewing the required resources for this discussion, please address each of the following:
- How has the issue of drug addiction and the ‘war on drugs’ changed over the past 20 years? In particular, how have the populations impacted by drugs changed?
- Is drug addiction treated as a crime or as a medical issue in our society? In your informed opinion, which should it be? Defend your answer using the resources provided.
- In your informed opinion, what do you think is the best course of action to address the drug addiction epidemic in the U.S.? Should it differ by which drug is being abused? Should it differ by the population using the drugs?
- Drug addiction is increasingly impacting whites, women, and middle/upper class people. How have these changes impacted the social construction of drug addiction in our society? In other words, how have these changes impacted the ways in which drug abuse is or is not criminalized and how it is treated by the criminal justice system?
Your initial post should be at least 500 words in length. Support your claims with examples from required material(s) and/or other scholarly resources, and properly cite any references. Respond to at least two of your classmates’ posts by Day 7. Several topics are possible in this discussion, with some of you focusing on the first points while others are more interested in topics listed later in the list.
Solution Preview
War on Drugs
The aspect of drug and substance addiction has changed significantly over time in the past 20 years and more. A long time ago, drug addiction was related to a particular group of people. However, the recent study reveals that the challenge of addiction has spread even to certain groups of people across various social classes and races. According to a report by Korgen & Furst (2012), the wars on drugs majorly concerns conflicts among races when the law enforcers became too strict in ensuring that the laws are kept in mind and that offenders were punished accordingly.
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