Imperial Drug Economies, Development, and the Search for Alternatives in Asia, from Colonialism to Decolonisation

This paper challenges contemporary policy conceptions on the historical relationship between drugs and development policies. It uses a historical analysis to examine the interaction of drugs, governance, security, welfare and economic development policies within drug producing contexts in Asia, from...

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Main Author: John Collins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut de Hautes Études Internationales et du Développement 2020-09-01
Series:Revue Internationale de Politique de Développement
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/poldev/3683
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spelling doaj-49524b7244e245ad8afcef03c3a490962020-12-08T11:27:56ZengInstitut de Hautes Études Internationales et du DéveloppementRevue Internationale de Politique de Développement1663-93751663-93912020-09-011210.4000/poldev.3683Imperial Drug Economies, Development, and the Search for Alternatives in Asia, from Colonialism to DecolonisationJohn CollinsThis paper challenges contemporary policy conceptions on the historical relationship between drugs and development policies. It uses a historical analysis to examine the interaction of drugs, governance, security, welfare and economic development policies within drug producing contexts in Asia, from colonialism through the period of decolonisation. It highlights that although modern narratives of drugs and development tend to view the latter as new and involving even immediately contemporary innovations for dealing with the outcomes of drug economies and drug policies, the historical reality is much more complex. Managing drugs and development was a fundamental historical process of state regulation, control and the settling of geographical boundaries, both economically and physically. This chapter posits two foundational ideas. First, the issues of drugs and development have always been fundamentally linked, from the globalisation of trade through mercantilist imperial policies, state formation, the limits of governance, the distribution of economic gains, and political economy outcomes stretching from the local to the global. Drugs, licit and illicit, have therefore always been an issue of economic development. Second, policymakers have long recognised and developed state responses based on the above reality. While not going under its now ‘official’ title, many of the principles of ‘alternative development’ have been ingrained in policy responses and limitations over the past several centuries.http://journals.openedition.org/poldev/3683drug economydrug policiescriminalisationprohibitiondrug cultivationdrug control strategies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Collins
spellingShingle John Collins
Imperial Drug Economies, Development, and the Search for Alternatives in Asia, from Colonialism to Decolonisation
Revue Internationale de Politique de Développement
drug economy
drug policies
criminalisation
prohibition
drug cultivation
drug control strategies
author_facet John Collins
author_sort John Collins
title Imperial Drug Economies, Development, and the Search for Alternatives in Asia, from Colonialism to Decolonisation
title_short Imperial Drug Economies, Development, and the Search for Alternatives in Asia, from Colonialism to Decolonisation
title_full Imperial Drug Economies, Development, and the Search for Alternatives in Asia, from Colonialism to Decolonisation
title_fullStr Imperial Drug Economies, Development, and the Search for Alternatives in Asia, from Colonialism to Decolonisation
title_full_unstemmed Imperial Drug Economies, Development, and the Search for Alternatives in Asia, from Colonialism to Decolonisation
title_sort imperial drug economies, development, and the search for alternatives in asia, from colonialism to decolonisation
publisher Institut de Hautes Études Internationales et du Développement
series Revue Internationale de Politique de Développement
issn 1663-9375
1663-9391
publishDate 2020-09-01
description This paper challenges contemporary policy conceptions on the historical relationship between drugs and development policies. It uses a historical analysis to examine the interaction of drugs, governance, security, welfare and economic development policies within drug producing contexts in Asia, from colonialism through the period of decolonisation. It highlights that although modern narratives of drugs and development tend to view the latter as new and involving even immediately contemporary innovations for dealing with the outcomes of drug economies and drug policies, the historical reality is much more complex. Managing drugs and development was a fundamental historical process of state regulation, control and the settling of geographical boundaries, both economically and physically. This chapter posits two foundational ideas. First, the issues of drugs and development have always been fundamentally linked, from the globalisation of trade through mercantilist imperial policies, state formation, the limits of governance, the distribution of economic gains, and political economy outcomes stretching from the local to the global. Drugs, licit and illicit, have therefore always been an issue of economic development. Second, policymakers have long recognised and developed state responses based on the above reality. While not going under its now ‘official’ title, many of the principles of ‘alternative development’ have been ingrained in policy responses and limitations over the past several centuries.
topic drug economy
drug policies
criminalisation
prohibition
drug cultivation
drug control strategies
url http://journals.openedition.org/poldev/3683
work_keys_str_mv AT johncollins imperialdrugeconomiesdevelopmentandthesearchforalternativesinasiafromcolonialismtodecolonisation
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