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Treatmentality and the governing of drug use

Steffen Jöhncke (Department of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen)

Drugs and Alcohol Today

ISSN: 1745-9265

Article publication date: 11 December 2009

191

Abstract

This article discusses drug use treatment as a particular, indispensable institution in the political and cultural imagination of contemporary welfare societies. It is argued that the existence and funding of treatment is legitimate less on grounds of what it produces in terms of improvements to drug users' lives, and more as a politically and culturally suitable form of organizing the relationship between drug using and non‐using sections of the population. In this regard the analytical concept of treamentality ‐ a term formed as a combination of ‘treatment’ and the Foucauldian notion of ‘governmentality’ ‐ is suggested to help focus on how treatment has become the ‘obvious’ way to address certain problems of certain people.

Keywords

Citation

Jöhncke, S. (2009), "Treatmentality and the governing of drug use", Drugs and Alcohol Today, Vol. 9 No. 4, pp. 14-17. https://doi.org/10.1108/17459265200900036

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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