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Ep. 78: The Militarization of U.S. Media's Drug Coverage

Since the beginning of the so-called War on Drugs, authorities in the United States have viewed drugs not as a public health issue but one of crime, vice and violence, requiring the funding and mobilization not of medical officials but police, DEA agents and a sprawling network of paramilitary actors. 

In response, corporate media and its culture of parasitic, “ride-along” coverage has evolved in parallel taking this same line, reflecting the state’s approach rather than influencing or challenging it. “Drug stories,” with rare exception, fall under the “crime” reporting rubric rather than being seen as stories to be covered by reporters familiar with the actual science of drugs and addiction - skirting empiricism for police stenography and cartoon narratives replete with good guys and bad guys.

The result: a feedback loop of a police and federal government determined to keep the War on Drugs in their domain, shaping a media narrative that manufactures and manipulates the public’s and lawmakers’ perception of drugs and drug-related crime. But what if there’s another way? Increasingly, public health advocates and journalists have been pushing back, trying to demilitarize not just the public approach to drugs but how they’re covered in the media. 

On this episode, we explore how we got to this point––where drugs are viewed as an enemy force to be combated with violence and prisons––and highlight ways people are trying to fundamentally rewire the way we talk about the problems of drugs and addiction.

With guest Zachary Siegel, Journalism Fellow at Northeastern University’s Health in Justice Action Lab.

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Guest

Zachary Siegel is a journalist and writer based in Chicago. He is currently a Journalism Fellow at Northeastern University Law School’s Health In Justice Action Lab and co-host of Narcotica, a new podcast. His writing focuses on the intersection of public health and criminal justice in the context of drugs and has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Slate, WIRED, New York Magazine, The Daily Beast, VICE,  and other outlets. You can follow him @ZachWritesStuff.

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Changing The Narrative

A Health In Justice Action Lab Initiative

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Show Notes

Life-saving opioid addiction treatments get a negative slant

Zachary Siegel | April 17, 2019 | Columbia Journalism Review

How Joe Biden’s Policies Made the Opioid Crisis Harder to Treat

Zachary Siegel | May 23, 2019 | Politico

A dangerous fentanyl myth lives on

Elizabeth Brico | April 11, 2019 | Columbia Journalism Review

Deadly fentanyl bought online from China being shipped through the mail

Scott Pelley | April 28, 2019 | CBS 60 Minutes 

A Fight to Do No Harm

Joseph P. Williams | January 24, 2019 | U.S. News and World Report

Charging ‘Dealers’ with Homicide: Explained

Zachary Siegel, Leo Beletsky | November 2, 2018 | The Appeal

Addiction Doesn’t Always Last a Lifetime 

Maia Szalavitz | August 31, 2018 | The New York Times

Opioids Aren’t the Only Pain Drugs to Fear

Jane E. Brody | September 4, 2017 | The New York Times

The First Count of Fentanyl Deaths in 2016: Up 540% in Three Years

Josh Katz | September 2, 2017 | The New York Times

Addicts Need Help. Jails Could Have the Answer.

Sam Quinones | June 16, 2017 | The New York Times

Legalize It All

Dan Baum | April 2016 | Harper's

Decriminalisation of drug use and possession in Australia – A briefing note [PDF]

Hughes, C., Ritter, A., Chalmers, J., Lancaster, K., Barratt, M. & Moxham-Hall, V. | 2016 | UNSW Australia.

The paradox of Iran’s war on drugs and its progressive treatment of addiction

Maziyar Ghiabi | July 2, 2014 | The Conversation

Addiction Treatment With a Dark Side

Deborah Sontag | November 16, 2013 | The New York Times

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Transcript

For a full transcript of this episode, go here. 

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Ep. 78: The Militarization of U.S. Media's Drug Coverage

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