Journal article

A Hygienic Depoliticization: Supervised Injection Sites as a Harm-Reduction Strategy

Pages 59 to 76

Cite this article


  • Carrier, N.
(2003). A Hygienic Depoliticization: Supervised Injection Sites as a Harm-Reduction Strategy. Déviance et Société, . 27(1), 59-76. https://doi.org/10.3917/ds.271.0059.

  • Carrier, Nicolas.
« A Hygienic Depoliticization: Supervised Injection Sites as a Harm-Reduction Strategy ». Déviance et Société, 2003/1 Vol. 27, 2003. p.59-76. CAIRN.INFO, shs.cairn.info/journal-deviance-et-societe-2003-1-page-59?lang=en.

  • CARRIER, Nicolas,
2003. A Hygienic Depoliticization: Supervised Injection Sites as a Harm-Reduction Strategy. Déviance et Société, 2003/1 Vol. 27, p.59-76. DOI : 10.3917/ds.271.0059. URL : https://shs.cairn.info/journal-deviance-et-societe-2003-1-page-59?lang=en.

https://doi.org/10.3917/ds.271.0059


English

Since the late 1990s, several social actors in Canada have been pushing for the creation of state-funded centers where people can inject illegal drugs. This paper proposes a sociological interpretation of the fact that it only took a few years for this “harm reduction” strategy to receive political consideration in Canada, a country still devoted to a prohibitionist system. The arguments by university, journalistic, and political actors in favor of such centers appear to be focused on the socio-sanitary aspect of drug use. A hygienic depoliticization has occurred and the prohibition-legalization tension has disappeared.

Keywords

  • DRUGS
  • INJECTION
  • PROHIBITION
  • HARM REDUCTION
  • LEGALIZATION
  • POLITICS
  • CANADA

Publisher keywords: CANADA, DRUGS, HARM REDUCTION, INJECTION, LEGALIZATION, POLITICS, PROHIBITION


Logo Souscrire pour ouvrir

This article is available in open access under our model Subscribe To Open.

https://doi.org/10.3917/ds.271.0059

This article is available in conditional access

Subscribe to Cairn Pro

Starting at €18 per month

170 full-text journals at the heart of your profession
Already subscribed to Cairn Pro? Member of a client institution?