CfP: Drinking and Drug Policies in History: Contextualizing Causes and Consequences
Drinking
and Drug Policies
in History: Contextualizing Causes and
Consequences
Call
for papers Alcohol and Drugs History Society conference, 22-25
June 2017, Utrecht University, The Netherlands.
The
twentieth century dawned with an unparalleled drive to regulate the
production, distribution, and consumption of alcohol and other psychoactive
substances. Many countries have developed their own specific
historical trajectories of substance regulation, consumption, and user cultures. This regulatory drive continued into the 21st
century, where today we live once more in a period of decisive regulatory
changes and discussion. For instance as can be seen in the submission of
national regulations in Europe to EU directives. On the other hand, the ‘war on
drugs’ is now more contested than ever before.
Global
discussions have intensified concerning the consequences, feasibility, and
desirability of drug prohibition. Moreover, the rise of virtual communities of
substance use defies regulation within national borders.
To befit the context of this global
discussion, and to stimulate comparative transnational research on substance
use and regulation, the organizers of the conference would like to invite contributions
addressing histories, problems and consequences of substance regulation in
their wider contexts - including political, social, and cultural developments, as
well as responses by and consequences for civil society, communities, and
individuals.
Questions
may include but are not restricted to the following:
- To what extent were regulatory practices shaped and determined by national, local, or international factors?
- How did user cultures and consumption develop within the context of changing regimes, for instance in specific national or urban settings?
- How and why did substance use and substance regulation differ between periods and regions?
- How can we explain similarities and dissimilarities between regulation of different substances (e.g., alcohol, tobacco, ‘drugs’) and their consequences, and other regulatory regimes (e.g., food, medicine, gambling, etc.).
- How did legal markets and illegal economies, their impact on social, cultural and political life, and trading and trafficking patterns and routes develop in the context of changing regulation?
- What was the role of media debates and public discourses on changing regulatory regimes and on their impact?
Finally,
in light of the increasing availability of digitized sources the organizers are
particularly interested in methodological contributions: on availability of sources
in general, and on the impact of digitization of sources and the
possibilities of using advanced text mining tools for transnational
comparative research in alcohol and drug history in particular.
Proposals
for papers (300 words and a short CV) and sessions can be send to Stephen
Snelders (s.a.m.snelders@uu.nl) or Lisanne Walma (l.w.b.walma@uu.nl) before 15 December 2016. More information is
available on https://adhs2017.wordpress.com/