Drugs, Peace, and Development: Rethinking Policy
Learn about contradictions between drugs, peace and development policy and learn how to create more humane policies in this online course from SOAS.
Duration
5 weeks
Weekly study
2 hours
100% online
How it works
Unlimited subscription
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There is growing awareness that the ‘war on drugs’ has failed and that there is a need for reformed drug policies. But what does this mean in practice?
On this five-week course from SOAS University of London, you’ll delve into the latest debates in global drug policy and the current efforts to integrate drugs, development, and peacebuilding policies.
You’ll learn about the tensions and trade-offs between different policy goals and how these can be navigated to work towards more humane drug policies.
This course draws on world-leading research conducted in Afghanistan, Colombia, and Myanmar – countries that account for more than 90% of the world’s illicit opium production and more than half of the world’s cocaine production. In-depth case studies will take you into the lives of those involved in illicit drug economies.
You’ll learn how drugs, development, and peacebuilding intersect with one another in complex and surprising ways, and the consequences for people who depend upon illicit economies at the margins.
You’ll examine creative approaches and new policy directions for responding to illicit drugs. Within this, you’ll identify interventions that can generate more humane and inclusive outcomes for those involved in illicit drug economies.
SOAS is a centre of excellence in research and policy approaches to drugs, development, and peacebuilding.
Drawing upon SOAS’s global networks, you’ll learn from a diverse range of experts that have worked on drug issues.
Meet the teaching team, meet each other, and learn about what's ahead.
Explore drug policies in drug-producing countries in the global south. Take a quiz to explore your own knowledge of these issues. What surprising findings emerge?
What can we learn about illicit economies and conflicts by researching borderland regions? Introducing three major drug-producing regions of the world.
Learn about a new framework for exploring drugs, development and peacebuilding, and use it to gain new insights into challenges facing efforts to tackle drugs, achieve inclusive development and promote sustainable peace.
As you finish the first week of the course, take some time to consider what you have learned so far.
What are drugs and what policies are used to tackle them? Explore international drug control and zoom into Colombia and Myanmar to learn how policies impact on the drug trade and people who live in drug-producing regions.
Explore how drugs are defined and assess the different meanings, moralities, and functions of drugs, across different societies and at different times.
Examine the emergence of international drug control, and the policies and impacts of the US-led 'War on Drugs' in Colombia. Explore understandings of drug harm and risk environments.
Learn about Pat Jasan, an anti-drugs movement in Myanmar, and about how attempts to address the harms caused by drugs can generate new forms of harm.
Learn new ways to think about the consequences of drug policies, and how they relate to development and peacebuilding.
As you finish the second week of the course, take some time to consider what you have learned so far.
War to peace transitions are always challenging, but particularly in regions affected by illicit drug economies. Learn how drugs shape the dynamics of (dis)order, and the implications for peacebuilding policies.
Drug economies are often associated with violence. But are illicit drugs always a fuel for conflict? Learn more about the complex relationships between drugs, violence and peacebuilding.
Colombia's sought-after ‘war-to-peace transition’ was messy and contested from the start. Explore how the peace process played out on the ground and its impact on peoples' lives in the borderlands.
Ceasefires in Myanmar’s borderlands reduced armed conflict in the 1990s and 2000s but increased the region’s drug trade. Explore the political, economic and social dynamics of Myanmar’s ceasefires to understand why.
Policy makers often assume that tackling drugs and building peace go hand in hand. Let's explore whether this is the case in practice.
As you finish the third week of the course, take some time to consider what you have learned so far.
Learn about the relationships between illicit drugs and development and study the lessons from alternative development projects in Afghanistan and Colombia.
Explore how drug economies interact with processes of development and find out about how 'alternative development' projects have impacted on drugs.
Learn about the role of borderlands as hubs for illicit economies, but also as centres of rapid change, innovation and development.
Follow drugs from farmers' fields to the border, in southwestern Afghanistan. Explore the interactions between drugs, war and development, as well as efforts to combat drugs through alternative development programmes.
Learn about efforts to address drugs in Colombia through a national drug substitution programme. Explore this programme and the everyday impacts of drug economies in frontier regions through the eyes of social leaders.
Can drugs and development goals be reconciled in practice? Examine the tensions and trade offs between these sets of policies when pursued in drugs-affected borderlands.
As you finish the fourth week of the course, take some time to consider what you have learned so far.
Recognising that the ‘War on Drugs’ has failed is one thing, but what replaces it? Learn how policy making might be reformed to address drugs, development and peacebuilding challenges.
Significant tensions and trade-offs exist between drugs, development and peacebuilding goals. What does this mean for policy? How can policy makers locate and navigate these tensions?
Listen to practitioners reflect on the challenges they face reconciling drugs, development and peacebuilding goals. Share your own insights into how what you have learnt from this course. How will it shape your future work?
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