A timely and gripping investigation of
illegal drugs in the UK. Filled with fascinating and
shocking case studies gathered over twenty years of
investigative reporting, it explodes many of the myths
and misconceptions about drug use, and makes a
compelling case for a new way forward. Looking
at the dealers, the users, the police and the
politicians, Narcomania charts how consumption
and markets have fragmented and changed over the last
decade; follows the money to reveal where Britain's
licit and illicit economies overlap; explains where each
of the major recreational drugs comes from; and maps
which drugs are popular in different parts of the
country. It will explode many of the myths and
misconceptions about drug use, and tap into fraught
debates about how politicians, parents and police should
respond. In the wake of the internet boom,
globalisation and a decade of decadence, Britain sits at
a crossroads in the legalisation-versus-intolerance
debate. While other nations have succeeded with
progressive experiments, inertia and self-contradiction
define British drug policy to the detriment of everyone
except the criminal underworld. Unsurprisingly, in the
light of this book, our politicians are confused about
what will please or displease the all-important middle
class electorate. Equally unsurprisingly, however, so
much myth and confusion surrounds the subject that
clarity must be brought to chaos if the wisdom of the
crowd is ever to surface....
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