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Toiling in the Vineyards: American Security and the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, 1938-1968

thesis
posted on 2025-08-06, 19:01 authored by Matthew Pembleton
<p>The story of America's war on drugs usually begins with Richard Nixon in 1971. However, the history of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics--the country's first drug control agency--suggests that the drug war's roots lay in the years following WWII, when the U.S. government began to consistently depict drug control as a paramilitary conflict and first stationed agents overseas to disrupt the flow of drugs to American shores. Analysis of the ideology and foreign policy of the early drug wars shows how the U.S. government interpreted addiction and organized crime as profound threats to the American people. Skeptical of public health efforts to reduce demand, the FBN believed that reducing the global supply of drugs was the only way to contain the slavery of addiction. In effect, America applied a foreign policy solution to a domestic social crisis. The FBN's effort to bring the rest of the world into line behind American expectations on drug control demonstrates how consistently U.S. policymakers have assumed that security at home could only be achieved by through some form of hegemony abroad.</p>

History

Publisher

ProQuest

Language

English

Handle

http://hdl.handle.net/1961/16580

Committee chair

Peter Kuznick

Committee member(s)

Max P. Friedman; Alan Kraut; Alfred McCoy

Degree discipline

History

Degree grantor

American University. Department of History

Degree level

  • Doctoral

Degree name

Ph.D. in History, American University, 2014

Local identifier

thesesdissertations_318_Pembleton_american_0008E_10603_OBJ.pdf

Media type

application/pdf

Pagination

428 pages

Access statement

Electronic thesis is restricted to authorized American University users only, per author's request.

Call number

Thesis 10115

MMS ID

99158834353604102

Submission ID

10603