Gender and identity construction amongst people injecting drugs in Thailand

Abstract

"September 2011"Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Faculty of Arts, Dept. of Anthropology, 2012.Bibliography: p. [203]-229.Introduction: Approaching the meanings of drugs -- Political economy of illicit drugs in Thailand -- Violence and suffering: the everyday lives of Thai drug users -- Management of sleves: survival tactics -- Gender drug use -- Harm reduction, social movement, and space -- Conclusion.Injecting drug users worldwide are often ensnared in a web of problems arising largely from what is commonly termed 'structural violence', a phenomenon that causes suffering and renders injecting drug users vulnerable to a range of social dilemmas and health threats. Political and social forces, which range from oppressive drug control policies to widespread stigma to discrimination, combine to marginalise injecting drug users and contribute to the sense of alienation that isolates users from non-users. These distancing processes become a potent barrier that excludes many users from pursuing conventional social lives and activities within mainstream society. -- Understanding widespread injecting drug use and abuse in Thailand requires exploration of its linkage with all levels of society. The thesis examines how political-economy forces at the macro level have shaped the meaning of drug use and drug epidemics; as well, it explores the pressures that drug users are subjected to at the micro level within family and other interpersonal relations. Particular emphasis is upon HIV infection, its spread, and how Thailand's drug users have invented a range of tactics that aim to lessen the impact of social rejection associated with disease and allow them to maintain their drug use behaviour. Women injecting drug users in particular, are caught in a difficult tension between the demands of being a Thai woman seeking to exist in a masculinised world of drug users and meeting Thai society's expectations of womanhood. Harm reduction programs may prove the means of facilitating drug users' increased public profile. This thesis also explores how new social movements allow drug users to engage in a habitable social space and fashion new forms of subjective identity.Mode of access: World Wide Web.1 online resource (xiv, 231 p.) col. il

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