Common Challenges, Common Responses: Fighting Narcotics as a Harbinger of International Cooperation

Abstract

Popular and elite attitudes towards the production and trade in opium and its derivatives have undergone drastic changes over the last two hundred years. Introduced to the region as a cash crop by colonial powers controlling its international trade routes, opium had become by the mid 20th century a regular feature both of agricultural production –often under under government regulation if not instigation–, as well as recreational drug use of the well-heeled sections of society throughout the region but especially in Iran, Afghanistan, and in that part of the British Raj that comprises the territory of today’s Pakistan.
Original languageEnglish
NewspaperECO Chronicle
Number of pages4
Publication statusPublished - 2014

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