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The Origins of Cocaine: Colonization and Failed Development in the Amazon Andes

  • Stony Brook University

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

In the 1960s, the governments of Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia launched agricultural settlement programs in each country’s vast Amazonian frontier lowlands. Two decades later, these exact same zones had transformed into the centers of the illicit cocaine boom of the Americas. Drawing on concepts from both history and anthropology, The Origins of Cocaine explores how three countries with divergent different mid-century political trajectories ended up with parallel outcomes in illicit frontier economies and cocalero cultures. Bringing together transnational, national, and local analyses, the volume provides an in-depth examination of the deep origins of drug economics in the Americas. As the first substantial study on the shift from agrarian colonization to narcotization, The Origins of Cocaine will appeal to scholars and postgraduate students of Latin American history, anthropology, globalization, development and environmental studies.

Original languageEnglish
PublisherTaylor and Francis
Number of pages178
ISBN (Electronic)9780429951749
ISBN (Print)9780429489389
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2018

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