Social Problems - General & Miscellaneous, Public Opinion - General & Miscellaneous, Sociology - General & Miscellaneous, Mass Media & Crime, Media - General & Miscellaneous, Public Opinion - United States, Drugs & Controlled Substances - Social Aspects
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Overview
In Crack Mothers, Drew Humphries asserts that medicine and criminal justice have always been at odds on the subject of drug use. One treats drug users as patients, the other as criminals. However, beginning in the late 1980s, the "crack mother" scare led to an unprecedented alliance between doctors and prosecutors in same states, where doctors turned addicted pregnant women over to the police for arrest, trial, and incarceration. Humphries analyzes the public reaction to crack cocaine and the policies instituted to combat it. She shows us that more often than not, policies were generated by the fears that crack mothers were harbingers of even more serious social problems. The media's construction of the crack mother as a model of depravity is, she argues, a reflection of mainstream desires and fears, not a reflection of the truth. Humphries offers a more balanced view of the women who use crack and the policies that have been adopted to stop them.Book Details
Published
May 1, 1999
Publisher
Columbus, OH : Ohio State University Press, c1999.
Pages
232
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780814208168