International Journal of Drug Policy
Volume 21, Issue 5 , Pages 390-398, September 2010

Beyond neoclassical economics: Social process, agency and the maintenance of order in an Australian illicit drug marketplace

National Drug Research Institute, Curtin University of Technology, Melbourne Office, 7/19-35 Gertrude St, Fitzroy, VIC 3065, Australia

Received 6 October 2009; received in revised form 25 February 2010; accepted 1 March 2010. published online 31 March 2010.

Abstract 

Background

The dominant Australian approaches to understanding illicit drug marketplaces are surveillance and criminological research. These approaches rely on the elementary neoclassical economic model of the market which focuses primarily on supply and demand. In this paper, we draw on anthropological and sociological research to develop an alternative framework for understanding Australian illicit drug marketplaces that emphasises their constituent processes.

Methods

The paper draws on two years of ethnographic research among heroin user/sellers of Vietnamese ethnicity in an Australian heroin marketplace.

Results

Trade and barter were key modes of exchange in this marketplace. We identified active negotiation and bargaining over price on the basis of social relationships, with dealers and customers actively working to develop and maintain such ties. Dealers set price collectively and this was shaped by moral and cultural elements such as notions of a ‘fair’ price. Social processes and relations as well as shared cultural expectations helped to generate trust and maintain order in the marketplace.

Conclusion

Our ethnographic research suggests that the dominant Australian approaches to the study of illicit drug markets, with their reliance on the elementary neoclassical economic market model, ignore the social processes and social relations through which such sites are made and remade. Nor do they adequately capture the complex character of the subjects who act within these sites. If we are to expand our understanding of illicit drug markets and marketplaces in Australia, we must look beyond the conceptions offered by surveillance and criminological approaches.

Keywords: Illicit drug marketplaces, Dealers, Social relations, Modes of exchange, Agency

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PII: S0955-3959(10)00048-4

doi:10.1016/j.drugpo.2010.03.001

International Journal of Drug Policy
Volume 21, Issue 5 , Pages 390-398, September 2010