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Marekets, regulation and drug law reform: Towards a constitutive approach

By: Seddon, Toby.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Social and Legal Studies: An International Journal Description: 29(3), Jun, 2020: p. 313-333.Subject(s): Drugs, economics, governance, markets, political economy, regulation In: Social and Legal Studies: An International JournalSummary: After a century of international drug prohibition, and amidst growing consensus that it has been a costly policy failure, arguments for drug law reform are gathering momentum globally. Despite a large body of empirically oriented policy research, the area remains underdeveloped conceptually and theoretically. This article seeks to address this gap by assembling some intellectual resources for a critical socio-legal analysis of drug law reform, drawing on insights from regulation studies, economics, political economy and economic sociology. Reframing the problem as one of market regulation, and using Shearing’s constitutive approach, opens up some new ways of thinking about how drug laws function and the possibilities for reform. It also highlights the importance of taking normative thinking about drug policy futures seriously. In conclusion, it is suggested that a new concept of exchange space may be key to further theoretical development in this field. – Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
29(3), Jun, 2020: p. 313-333 Available AR124097

After a century of international drug prohibition, and amidst growing consensus that it has been a costly policy failure, arguments for drug law reform are gathering momentum globally. Despite a large body of empirically oriented policy research, the area remains underdeveloped conceptually and theoretically. This article seeks to address this gap by assembling some intellectual resources for a critical socio-legal analysis of drug law reform, drawing on insights from regulation studies, economics, political economy and economic sociology. Reframing the problem as one of market regulation, and using Shearing’s constitutive approach, opens up some new ways of thinking about how drug laws function and the possibilities for reform. It also highlights the importance of taking normative thinking about drug policy futures seriously. In conclusion, it is suggested that a new concept of exchange space may be key to further theoretical development in this field. – Reproduced

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