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Mephedrone, assassin of youth: the rhetoric of fear in contemporary drug scares

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Mephedrone, assassin of youth: the rhetoric of fear in contemporary drug scares. / Alexandrescu, Liviu.
In: Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal, Vol. 10, No. 1, 09.04.2014, p. 23-37.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Alexandrescu L. Mephedrone, assassin of youth: the rhetoric of fear in contemporary drug scares. Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal. 2014 Apr 9;10(1):23-37. doi: 10.1177/1741659013511975

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Alexandrescu, Liviu. / Mephedrone, assassin of youth : the rhetoric of fear in contemporary drug scares. In: Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal. 2014 ; Vol. 10, No. 1. pp. 23-37.

Bibtex

@article{fa10eeeb0a73403a9c87a4ec999808e3,
title = "Mephedrone, assassin of youth: the rhetoric of fear in contemporary drug scares",
abstract = "This article examines how mephedrone, the most popular legal high sold freely in the United Kingdom until its classification as a high-risk drug, in April 2010, was constructed by the British popular media as a moral epidemic that threatened the very symbolic heart of the nation – its youth. News of teenagers committing suicide after taking the drug or dying of overdose had been presented in the pages of tabloid dailies for months when the government decided to ban the substance despite the lack of solid scientific data on the medical and social risks it posed. Drawing on Teun van Dijk{\textquoteright}s socio-cognitive approach to critical discourse studies, this article demonstrates how in its attempt to influence national policy the media largely responded to the new drug problem with panic discourses that perpetuated the old {\textquoteleft}war on drugs{\textquoteright} ideology, choosing to frame mephedrone as an agent of death and moral downfall even when its destructive influence was questionable. In this perspective, a blueprint made of multiple layers of historical drug scares and repressive drug policies shaped the metaphors and narratives used by the media to codify a sense of threat and by the audiences to interpret the symptoms of a social pathology.",
keywords = "discourse analysis, drug panic, drugs in the media, mephedrone, moral panic, war on drugs, novel psychoactive substances, legal highs ",
author = "Liviu Alexandrescu",
year = "2014",
month = apr,
day = "9",
doi = "10.1177/1741659013511975",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "23--37",
journal = "Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal",
issn = "1741-6590",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Mephedrone, assassin of youth

T2 - the rhetoric of fear in contemporary drug scares

AU - Alexandrescu, Liviu

PY - 2014/4/9

Y1 - 2014/4/9

N2 - This article examines how mephedrone, the most popular legal high sold freely in the United Kingdom until its classification as a high-risk drug, in April 2010, was constructed by the British popular media as a moral epidemic that threatened the very symbolic heart of the nation – its youth. News of teenagers committing suicide after taking the drug or dying of overdose had been presented in the pages of tabloid dailies for months when the government decided to ban the substance despite the lack of solid scientific data on the medical and social risks it posed. Drawing on Teun van Dijk’s socio-cognitive approach to critical discourse studies, this article demonstrates how in its attempt to influence national policy the media largely responded to the new drug problem with panic discourses that perpetuated the old ‘war on drugs’ ideology, choosing to frame mephedrone as an agent of death and moral downfall even when its destructive influence was questionable. In this perspective, a blueprint made of multiple layers of historical drug scares and repressive drug policies shaped the metaphors and narratives used by the media to codify a sense of threat and by the audiences to interpret the symptoms of a social pathology.

AB - This article examines how mephedrone, the most popular legal high sold freely in the United Kingdom until its classification as a high-risk drug, in April 2010, was constructed by the British popular media as a moral epidemic that threatened the very symbolic heart of the nation – its youth. News of teenagers committing suicide after taking the drug or dying of overdose had been presented in the pages of tabloid dailies for months when the government decided to ban the substance despite the lack of solid scientific data on the medical and social risks it posed. Drawing on Teun van Dijk’s socio-cognitive approach to critical discourse studies, this article demonstrates how in its attempt to influence national policy the media largely responded to the new drug problem with panic discourses that perpetuated the old ‘war on drugs’ ideology, choosing to frame mephedrone as an agent of death and moral downfall even when its destructive influence was questionable. In this perspective, a blueprint made of multiple layers of historical drug scares and repressive drug policies shaped the metaphors and narratives used by the media to codify a sense of threat and by the audiences to interpret the symptoms of a social pathology.

KW - discourse analysis

KW - drug panic

KW - drugs in the media

KW - mephedrone

KW - moral panic

KW - war on drugs

KW - novel psychoactive substances

KW - legal highs

U2 - 10.1177/1741659013511975

DO - 10.1177/1741659013511975

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

SP - 23

EP - 37

JO - Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal

JF - Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal

SN - 1741-6590

IS - 1

ER -