Montero Fernando, Bourgois Philippe, Friedman Joseph
Columbia University, US.
University of California, Los Angeles, US.
J Illicit Econ Dev. 2022;4(2):204-222. doi: 10.31389/jied.122. Epub 2022 Dec 2.
Multiple transformations-referred to as "waves" in a panoply of recent public health and law enforcement publications-have rendered North American drug markets increasingly toxic since the early 2010s. The introduction of exceptionally potent synthetic sedatives and stimulants is initiating a new generation of drug injectors into co-use of opioids and methamphetamine, catapulting rates of deadly overdoses and infectious diseases. Drawing on extensive participant-observation research in Philadelphia (2007-present) and Tijuana (2018-present), we document the experience of street-based drug users across these two North American cities to focus on regional shifts in narcotics supplies and endpoint user preferences. We link the dramatic proliferation of fentanyl, methamphetamine, xylazine, and Mexican white powder heroin to: 1) pre-existing drug supply networks on the western and eastern coasts of the North American subcontinent; 2) material characteristics of local heroin supplies in pre-fentanyl opiate markets (Mexican black tar vs. Colombian off-white powder heroin); and 3) racialized repression/incarceration of drug sellers and users on both sides of the Mexico-US border. The article combines economic and medical anthropology to develop an ethnographically-informed political economy approach to an urgent public health challenge among street-based drug users with the highest overdose mortality rates in the US Northeastern Rust Belt and the Northwestern Mexican borderland metroplex anchored by Tijuana. It foregrounds street users' experiences in real time amidst rapidly shifting narcotics supply chains, linking market-driven logics of profit-seeking to the war on drugs' prohibitionist policy context, highlighting increasing toxic impacts on vulnerable sectors across regions.
自2010年代初以来,多种转变——在近期大量公共卫生和执法出版物中被称为“浪潮”——使北美毒品市场的毒性越来越大。超强效合成镇静剂和兴奋剂的引入,正促使新一代吸毒者同时使用阿片类药物和甲基苯丙胺,导致致命过量用药和传染病发生率急剧上升。基于在费城(2007年至今)和蒂华纳(2018年至今)进行的广泛参与观察研究,我们记录了这两个北美城市街头吸毒者的经历,以关注毒品供应的区域变化和终端用户偏好。我们将芬太尼、甲基苯丙胺、赛拉嗪和墨西哥白粉海洛因的急剧扩散与以下因素联系起来:1)北美次大陆西海岸和东海岸现有的毒品供应网络;2)芬太尼出现之前的阿片类药物市场中当地海洛因供应的物质特征(墨西哥黑焦油海洛因与哥伦比亚灰白色粉末海洛因);3)美墨边境两侧对毒品卖家和使用者的种族化镇压/监禁。本文结合经济人类学和医学人类学,针对美国东北部铁锈地带和以蒂华纳为中心的墨西哥西北边境大都市地区街头吸毒者面临的紧急公共卫生挑战,开发了一种基于人种志的政治经济学方法。它突出了街头吸毒者在迅速变化的毒品供应链中的实时经历,将市场驱动的逐利逻辑与禁毒主义政策背景下的毒品战争联系起来,强调了对各地区弱势群体日益增加的毒性影响。