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Prologue: Los Angeles, 1950–51
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations ix
- List of Tables xv
- Abbreviations xvii
- Introduction 1
- The Drug-War Consensus and the Carceral State 7
- White Drug Crime: Hidden in Plain Sight 13
- Youth Politics and Social Control 21
- The Power and Permanence of Suburban Crisis 26
- Prologue: Los Angeles, 1950–51 32
-
1 Pushers and Victims
- Introduction 37
- Producing the White Teenage Narcotics Crisis 42
- California’s Early War on Narcotics 59
- Nationalizing the Suburban Narcotics Crisis 76
- California Drug Enforcement and the Mexican Border 95
-
2 Suburban Rebels
- Introduction 113
- Constructing the White Middle-Class Delinquency Epidemic 117
- Sensationalizing and Medicalizing Suburban Drug Crime 136
- Campus Rebels and the Psychedelic Drug Culture 155
- Hippies, Runaways, and Heroin 171
-
3 Generation Gap
- Introduction 188
- San Francisco Bay Area: Drug Markets and High School Politics 194
- Suburbs of New York City: Race, Class, and De Facto Decriminalization 206
- Metropolitan Washington, DC: Diverting the “Normal” Youth Revolt 223
- Metropolitan Los Angeles: Mass Arrests in White Suburbia 232
- Drug Prevention and the “Credibility Gap” 246
-
4 Public Enemy Number One
- Introduction 256
- Cruel and Unusual Punishment? 262
- Bipartisan Consensus for Federal Drug Reform 271
- Saving the White Suburban Victim-Criminal 281
- Marijuana, Heroin, and the War on Drugs 294
- “All-Out War, On All Fronts” 308
-
5 Impossible Criminals
- Introduction 317
- Marijuana Legalization vs. Decriminalization 322
- State-Level Reform: “Concerned Parents” and “The Wrong Kids” 335
- Marijuana Decriminalization in Oregon 346
- Marijuana Reform and Race in California 354
- The Rockefeller Drug Laws and the “Real Criminals” 372
-
6 Parent Power
- Introduction 387
- Marijuana Decriminalization at the Crossroads 391
- The Origins of the “Parents’ Movement” 400
- The Carter Administration’s “Political Powder Keg” 415
- The Demand-Side Drug War 426
- National Federation of Parents for Drug-Free Youth 440
-
7 Zero Tolerance
- Introduction 451
- The Reagan Administration and the “Parents’ Movement” 458
- Marijuana and Alcohol: The Gateway Drugs 471
- “Tough Love” at the Grassroots 490
- Teen Drinking: Get MADD 500
- Crack Cocaine and the Racially Divergent Drug War 512
- Epilogue 527
- Acknowledgments 535
- Archives and Abbreviations in Notes 539
- Notes 545
- Index 643
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations ix
- List of Tables xv
- Abbreviations xvii
- Introduction 1
- The Drug-War Consensus and the Carceral State 7
- White Drug Crime: Hidden in Plain Sight 13
- Youth Politics and Social Control 21
- The Power and Permanence of Suburban Crisis 26
- Prologue: Los Angeles, 1950–51 32
-
1 Pushers and Victims
- Introduction 37
- Producing the White Teenage Narcotics Crisis 42
- California’s Early War on Narcotics 59
- Nationalizing the Suburban Narcotics Crisis 76
- California Drug Enforcement and the Mexican Border 95
-
2 Suburban Rebels
- Introduction 113
- Constructing the White Middle-Class Delinquency Epidemic 117
- Sensationalizing and Medicalizing Suburban Drug Crime 136
- Campus Rebels and the Psychedelic Drug Culture 155
- Hippies, Runaways, and Heroin 171
-
3 Generation Gap
- Introduction 188
- San Francisco Bay Area: Drug Markets and High School Politics 194
- Suburbs of New York City: Race, Class, and De Facto Decriminalization 206
- Metropolitan Washington, DC: Diverting the “Normal” Youth Revolt 223
- Metropolitan Los Angeles: Mass Arrests in White Suburbia 232
- Drug Prevention and the “Credibility Gap” 246
-
4 Public Enemy Number One
- Introduction 256
- Cruel and Unusual Punishment? 262
- Bipartisan Consensus for Federal Drug Reform 271
- Saving the White Suburban Victim-Criminal 281
- Marijuana, Heroin, and the War on Drugs 294
- “All-Out War, On All Fronts” 308
-
5 Impossible Criminals
- Introduction 317
- Marijuana Legalization vs. Decriminalization 322
- State-Level Reform: “Concerned Parents” and “The Wrong Kids” 335
- Marijuana Decriminalization in Oregon 346
- Marijuana Reform and Race in California 354
- The Rockefeller Drug Laws and the “Real Criminals” 372
-
6 Parent Power
- Introduction 387
- Marijuana Decriminalization at the Crossroads 391
- The Origins of the “Parents’ Movement” 400
- The Carter Administration’s “Political Powder Keg” 415
- The Demand-Side Drug War 426
- National Federation of Parents for Drug-Free Youth 440
-
7 Zero Tolerance
- Introduction 451
- The Reagan Administration and the “Parents’ Movement” 458
- Marijuana and Alcohol: The Gateway Drugs 471
- “Tough Love” at the Grassroots 490
- Teen Drinking: Get MADD 500
- Crack Cocaine and the Racially Divergent Drug War 512
- Epilogue 527
- Acknowledgments 535
- Archives and Abbreviations in Notes 539
- Notes 545
- Index 643