The social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant use and their implications for policy and practice

This chapter focuses on the social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant (ATS) use (e.g. amphetamine, methamphetamine ('speed' and 'ice'), dexamphetamine, methylphenidate, MOMA (ecstasy)). Understanding these social contexts and cultural meanings is importa...

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Main Authors: Dwyer, Robyn, Pennay, Amy, Green, Rachael, Siokou, Christine, Barratt, Monica, Thomson, N, Moore, David
Other Authors: Steve Allsop
Format: Book Chapter
Published: IP Communications 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25957
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author Dwyer, Robyn
Pennay, Amy
Green, Rachael
Siokou, Christine
Barratt, Monica
Thomson, N
Moore, David
author2 Steve Allsop
author_facet Steve Allsop
Dwyer, Robyn
Pennay, Amy
Green, Rachael
Siokou, Christine
Barratt, Monica
Thomson, N
Moore, David
author_sort Dwyer, Robyn
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This chapter focuses on the social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant (ATS) use (e.g. amphetamine, methamphetamine ('speed' and 'ice'), dexamphetamine, methylphenidate, MOMA (ecstasy)). Understanding these social contexts and cultural meanings is important because they shape the ways in which ATS are understood and experienced. The effects of ATS, from experiences of intoxication to experiences of 'dependence: are not simply the product of pharmacology. Drugs and drug use are simultaneously the product of the interpretations and shared meanings constructed by the people who consume them, and these interpretations and meanings are themselves the products of particular social, cultural, political, economic and historical contexts. Furthermore, these meanings are not fixed. Rather they are produced and reproduced in ongoing processes of social negotiation and contestation. Thus, ATS effects are produced through the interactions of pharmacology, subjectivity, micro-contexts (e.g. social relationships, symbolic meanings), and macro-contexts (i.e. broader social, cultural, political, economic and historical contexts). We begin the chapter with a brief history of ATS use. Although this history is touched on in other chapters in this book, it has particular relevance to a discussion on the social contexts of use, and so we include it here. This is followed by an overview of previous Australian research on the social contexts and cultural meanings of ATS use. We then present several case studies of ATS use in contemporary Australia. We conclude by considering how a focus on the social contexts and cultural meanings of ATS use might inform the future development of drug policy and practice.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-259572023-02-02T07:57:40Z The social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant use and their implications for policy and practice Dwyer, Robyn Pennay, Amy Green, Rachael Siokou, Christine Barratt, Monica Thomson, N Moore, David Steve Allsop Nicole Lee This chapter focuses on the social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant (ATS) use (e.g. amphetamine, methamphetamine ('speed' and 'ice'), dexamphetamine, methylphenidate, MOMA (ecstasy)). Understanding these social contexts and cultural meanings is important because they shape the ways in which ATS are understood and experienced. The effects of ATS, from experiences of intoxication to experiences of 'dependence: are not simply the product of pharmacology. Drugs and drug use are simultaneously the product of the interpretations and shared meanings constructed by the people who consume them, and these interpretations and meanings are themselves the products of particular social, cultural, political, economic and historical contexts. Furthermore, these meanings are not fixed. Rather they are produced and reproduced in ongoing processes of social negotiation and contestation. Thus, ATS effects are produced through the interactions of pharmacology, subjectivity, micro-contexts (e.g. social relationships, symbolic meanings), and macro-contexts (i.e. broader social, cultural, political, economic and historical contexts). We begin the chapter with a brief history of ATS use. Although this history is touched on in other chapters in this book, it has particular relevance to a discussion on the social contexts of use, and so we include it here. This is followed by an overview of previous Australian research on the social contexts and cultural meanings of ATS use. We then present several case studies of ATS use in contemporary Australia. We conclude by considering how a focus on the social contexts and cultural meanings of ATS use might inform the future development of drug policy and practice. 2012 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25957 IP Communications restricted
spellingShingle Dwyer, Robyn
Pennay, Amy
Green, Rachael
Siokou, Christine
Barratt, Monica
Thomson, N
Moore, David
The social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant use and their implications for policy and practice
title The social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant use and their implications for policy and practice
title_full The social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant use and their implications for policy and practice
title_fullStr The social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant use and their implications for policy and practice
title_full_unstemmed The social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant use and their implications for policy and practice
title_short The social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant use and their implications for policy and practice
title_sort social contexts and cultural meanings of amphetamine-type stimulant use and their implications for policy and practice
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25957