Life in the Ant Trails: Cocaine and caustic circuits in Bissau
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This article looks ethnographically at the cocaine trade in and through Bissau, Guinea-Bissau. It clarifies some of the less obvious aspects of illegal cross-border trade and ties the minor flow of drugs, often trafficked by the desperate and disenfranchised, to larger global dynamics. While international media and commentators alike frequently depict transnational organized crime as a pathogen attacking the healthy global order, a closer look at the Bissau cocaine trade clarifies that the trade is neither external nor parasitical but integral to it. The trade’s grasp of Bissau is anchored in enduring critical circumstance, stretching from the social to the political, and displays several ironic feedback loops and interdependencies linking misfortune in time and space. The article thus shows how negative conditions may travel and circulate in a manner that ramifies vulnerability across economic and political borders.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Focaal: Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology |
Volume | 2019 |
Issue number | 85 |
Pages (from-to) | 15-25 |
ISSN | 0920-1297 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2019 |
- Faculty of Social Sciences - caustic circuits, cocaine trade, interdependency, transnational organized crime
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