
The first critical analysis of how Whiteness drove the opioid crisis. In the past two decades, media images of the surprisingly white “new face” of the US opioid crisis abounded. But why was... Read More
"Psychiatrist and anthropologist Hansen, policy advocate and sociologist Netherland, and historian Herzberg richly scrutinise drug use and race along multiple axes that include medicine, public policy, and history to emerge with a powerful portrait of precisely how the social construct of race and systemic racism have both created and blinded us to the unequal treatment of Black and white drug users. Through anthropology, personal histories, and nuanced data analysis this troika engages in textured, deeply researched, scholarship."- Lancet
“A thorough, incisive, and well researched book. . . . . As a history of the modern opioid crisis—from its origins in the nineteenth century to fentanyl today—you can’t get much more complete.”- Social History of Alcohol and Drugs journal
"Psychiatrist and anthropologist Hansen, policy advocate and sociologist Netherland, and historian Herzberg richly scrutinise drug use and race along multiple axes that include medicine, public policy, and history to emerge with a powerful portrait of precisely how the social construct of race and systemic racism have both created and blinded us to the unequal treatment of Black and white drug users. Through anthropology, personal histories, and nuanced data analysis this troika engages in textured, deeply researched, scholarship."– Lancet
“A thorough, incisive, and well researched book. . . . . As a history of the modern opioid crisis—from its origins in the nineteenth century to fentanyl today—you can’t get much more complete.”– Social History of Alcohol and Drugs journal