van de Ven Katinka, Mulrooney Kyle J D
School of Social Sciences, Birmingham City University, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Doctorate in Cultural and Global Criminology at University of Kent and the Universität, Hamburg, United Kingdom.
Int J Drug Policy. 2017 Feb;40:6-15. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2016.07.009. Epub 2016 Aug 27.
This paper explores the understudied phenomenon of performance and image enhancing drug (PIED) markets by examining the structure and formation of the market for PIEDs among bodybuilders in the Netherlands and Belgium. This article specifically seeks to account for individual reasons and motivations for dealing PIEDs within these bodybuilding subcultures. Understanding illicit PIED markets is important for policy decisions as knowledge on the production and distribution of these substances may assist in designing law enforcement efforts, harm reduction initiatives and treatment options.
This article draws on two years of fieldwork in various bodybuilding settings, 47 semi-structured interviews with individuals who are directly or indirectly involved in the PIED market and 64 PIED dealing cases initiated by criminal justice agencies in the Netherlands and Belgium.
The data indicates that PIED dealing groups and individuals are often driven by motivations stemming from their social and cultural embeddedness in the bodybuilding subculture. Specifically, these PIED dealers are 'over-socialized' into the structure and culture of bodybuilding and follow the cultural scripts that come with their group affiliation and organization. As a result of the cultural context in which these transactions occur, PIED dealing networks among bodybuilders in the Netherlands and Belgium are more likely to consist of friends or 'friends of friends' tied together by threads of collective meaning found within the bodybuilding subculture.
We argue that efforts seeking to explain the structure, formation and motivations of illicit PIED dealing must learn to appreciate how culture mediates structural forces and thereby influences individual and collective action. Policy makers, health care professionals and other relevant parties should consider a plurality of factors (social, economic and cultural) when designing and evaluating PIED-related interventions such as law enforcement efforts, harm reduction initiatives and treatment options.
本文通过研究荷兰和比利时健美运动员中性能和形象增强药物(PIED)市场的结构与形成,探讨了这一研究较少的现象。本文特别试图解释在这些健美亚文化中交易PIED的个人原因和动机。了解非法PIED市场对于政策决策很重要,因为有关这些物质生产和分销的知识可能有助于设计执法行动、减少伤害举措和治疗方案。
本文借鉴了在各种健美环境中进行的两年实地调查、对直接或间接参与PIED市场的个人进行的47次半结构化访谈,以及荷兰和比利时刑事司法机构发起的64起PIED交易案件。
数据表明,PIED交易群体和个人往往受到源于他们在健美亚文化中的社会和文化嵌入性的动机驱动。具体而言,这些PIED经销商“过度社会化”于健美运动的结构和文化之中,并遵循与其群体归属和组织相关的文化脚本。由于这些交易发生的文化背景,荷兰和比利时健美运动员中的PIED交易网络更有可能由朋友或“朋友的朋友”组成,他们通过健美亚文化中发现的集体意义纽带联系在一起。
我们认为,试图解释非法PIED交易的结构、形成和动机的努力必须学会理解文化如何调节结构力量,从而影响个人和集体行动。政策制定者、医疗保健专业人员和其他相关方在设计和评估与PIED相关的干预措施(如执法行动、减少伤害举措和治疗方案)时,应考虑多种因素(社会、经济和文化)。