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Forging new habits: critical drugs scholarship as an otherwise to rights.

Authors :
Seear, Kate
Mulcahy, Sean
Source :
International Journal of Human Rights. Oct/Nov2024, Vol. 28 Issue 8/9, p1329-1352. 24p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Global drug policy is currently dominated by great enthusiasm about human rights, including the idea that rights can generate less punitive approaches to drugs. But if human rights were an effective framework for the prevention of punitive approaches towards drugs, why haven't they prevented them previously? One possibility is that rights are less reliable for those society considers 'less than human'. In Western liberal contexts that valorise voluntarity, rationality, authenticity, and order, people who use drugs figure as compulsive, irrational, duplicitous and chaotic. Rights can reproduce these logics of abjection, including through the repetition of ideas about drugs and proper ways of being. A body of critical drug scholarship seeks to intervene in these constructions. This work mobilises 'habit' as an otherwise to 'addiction' and argues that habit is the foundation of realities. Habits, and thus realities, can be changed. This paper draws on these approaches to explore whether insights from critical drug scholarship can help to generate something after rights, made possible by new habits and modes of connection. To make this argument, we consider habits as a site of both repetition and rupture. We ask whether habits can help us rethink or disrupt rights, and the 'human' therein. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13642987
Volume :
28
Issue :
8/9
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Human Rights
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180430339
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/13642987.2023.2227104