The Split Labor Market and the Origins of Antidrug Legislation in the United States |
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Authors: | Kathleen Auerhahn |
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Institution: | Kathleen Auerhahn is a Ph.D. candidate in the department of sociology, University of California, Riverside. |
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Abstract: | Edna Bonacich's (1972) theoretical formulation of Split labor market dynamics as underlying the content and process of ethnic antagonism is expanded and applied to an historical analysis of the development of antidrug laws in the United States. The campaigns and resultant legislation against opium, cocaine, alcohol, and marijuana are subjected to a split labor market analysis that incorporates the notion of moral panics and an understanding of the ways in which law may be used as a "weapon" in the furtherance of class interests. The article concludes that each of these campaigns came about as the result of an underlying split labor market dynamic and adds to Bonacich's original formulation the response of criminalization of the threatening labor group by the higher-paid labor group. |
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