Content area

Abstract

Viewing police as important cultural producers, we ask how police power fashions structures of feeling and social imaginaries of the “war on drugs” in small towns of the rural Midwest. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork and a collection of interviews focusing on police officers’ beliefs about the causes of crime and drug use, we locate a narrative of rural decline attributed to the producers and users of methamphetamine. We argue this narrative supports punitive and authoritarian sensibilities and broader narcopolitical projects more generally and ignores long-standing social inequalities observed in rural communities. As such, the cultural work of rural police provides important insight to the shape and direction of late-modern crime control beyond the familiar terrains of the city and its “ghetto.”

Details

Title
Beyond the Ghetto: Police Power, Methamphetamine and the Rural War on Drugs
Author
Linnemann Travis 1 ; Kurtz, Don L 2 

 Old Dominion University, Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice, Norfolk, USA (GRID:grid.261368.8) (ISNI:0000000121643177) 
 Kansas State University, Manhattan, USA (GRID:grid.36567.31) (ISNI:0000000107371259) 
Pages
339-355
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Sep 2014
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
12058629
e-ISSN
15729877
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2579873660
Copyright
© Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013.