A black spot on the narcotics map drug policy in twentieth century Montana
Date
2024
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Publisher
Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science
Abstract
This research examines cycles of drug policy from the federal down to the local level in Montana. I show how drug policy, and the people and organizations that influence that policy, are part of a broader historical and geographical process. If drug use and drug policy are cyclical, as so many policy makers point out, then using a historical methodology to examine them can offer stronger and more nuanced policy analysis. This scholarship is important in understanding past practices to improve our future relationship with drugs in our communities. Specific case studies show the influence of women's clubs on public opinion and policy in Montana in the 1930s. I unpack the long history of methamphetamine leading to the rise of a graphic prevention campaign in Montana at the turn of the twenty-first century. This work addresses the intersections of federal and local drug policies, drawing on professional expertise from my work with the federal government as well as my scholarly research in the field.