Dead-end lives: Drugs and violence in the city shadows

Dead-end lives: Drugs and violence in the city shadows

by Daniel Briggs (Author), Daniel Briggs (Author)

Synopsis

Welcome to the city shadows in Valdemingomez: a lawless landscape of drugs and violence. Through vivid testimonies and images, Briggs and Monge tell the stories of the people who live there, placing them in a political, economic and social context of spatial inequality and oppressive mechanisms of social control.

$24.59

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 328
Publisher: Policy Press
Published: 08 Nov 2017

ISBN 10: 1447341694
ISBN 13: 9781447341697

Media Reviews
Wow! This book is an ethnographic tour de force documenting the European social democratic dream's collision with the nightmare reality of the neoliberal `global chase for profit'. - Professor Philippe Bourgois, author of Righteous Dopefiend and In Search of Respect: Selling Crack in El Barrio
A chilling ethnography that takes readers on a heart-breaking journey of marginalised and socially excluded drug users in Spain. Dead End Lives highlights a forgotten community, whilst remembering the harsh realities of individuals lives with humanity and grace. I would recommend this book to all of those with an interest and passion in challenging inequality and injustice around the globe. Grace Robinson, Edge Hill University
A detailed, enthralling and discomforting ethnographic investigation of the growing poverty and desperation found at the edges of Europe's glittering metropolises... what Briggs reveals will make you sad and angry, but the gritty reality of our most marginalised neighbourhoods must be researched in this way if the social sciences are to move forward - Professor Simon Winlow, Teesside University, UK
This is what criminology should be about! - Dr Leah Moyle, Griffith Criminology Institute, Australia
combines fantastic ethnography with new theoretical political economy, precisely the mixture we need to make sense of our nightmarish contemporary world...Riveting! - Steve Redhead, Professor of Cultural Studies, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia
Ethnographic work at its best, this book is essential reading for anyone interested in drugs, crime and harm. - Dr Alexandra Hall, Teesside University, UK
a thoroughly researched and exceptionally well written ethnography - Professor Jeffrey Ian Ross, University of Baltimore, US
This is an exceptional study and a fascinating read... ethnography at its best - Dr Steve Wakeman, Liverpool John Moores University, UK
Briggs trains his powerful searchlight on the devastating social consequences of unemployment, insecurity and pervasive drug markets - Professor Steve Hall, Teesside University, UK
This is just the type of research and critique Spain so desperately needs. - Dr Jorge Ramiro Perez Suarez, University of Huddersfield and the European University of Madrid, Spain
An unflinching, yet ultimately compassionate rendering of human vulnerability - Professor Rowland Atkinson, Sheffield University, UK
hard-hitting ethnography of the chaotic lives of socially-excluded cocaine and heroin consumers, and the limitations of drug policy - Dr James Windle, University of East London, UK
a riveting and at times chilling reading...a must-read for scholars and students of anthropology, criminology and sociology as well as activists and policy makers. - Dr Tereza Kuldova, University of Oslo, Norway
Author Bio
Dr Daniel Briggs is a Consultant to the British Foreign Office who works part time at the Universidad Europea in Madrid, Spain. As a researcher, writer and inter-disciplinary academic who studies social problems, he has undertaken ethnographic research into social issues from street drug users to terminally ill patients; from refugees to prostitutes; and from gypsies to gangs and deviant youth behaviours. He also lectures across the social sciences and has published widely. Ruben Monge Gamero has a first-class undergraduate degree in Criminology from Universidad Europea and his final year project was based on participant observation of Valdemingomez. He recently concluded a Masters in Intelligence Analysis and hopes to be a police officer.