Sociology of Addiction

A Social Science Approach by Dr.phil. Stephan Pflaum

Class, Intoxication, and Capital: A Marxist Map of Drug Markets

Teaser

I sketch a Marxist analysis of how drug markets are organized in capitalist systems—and what would likely change under a socialist organization. I triangulate legal alcohol, forbidden substances, and “Leistungsdrogen” (from cocaine to prescription stimulants and sport doping), and use Bourdieu’s class lens to read taste, status, and risk across fields.

Intro: Why drugs are never “just” drugs

From a Marxist view, intoxicants are commodities travelling through circuits of capital, law, and symbolic value. Prohibition does not negate commodification; it often enhances surplus profits via risk premia, while the state selectively legalizes highly taxable goods (alcohol), producing policy paradoxes: the most harmful substances by population burden can be the most normalized and fiscally embedded. (For alcohol’s public-health evidence base, see Babor et al., OUP.) (OUP Academic)

Methods window (Grounded Theory × Critical Political Economy)

  • Approach. I combine Grounded Theory memoing (sensitizing concepts: commodity, surplus value, field/habitus) with comparative political economy (law–market co-production).
  • Data anchors. Global supply/consumption patterns (UNODC), classic and modern sociology (Marx, Bourdieu, Becker, Bourgois), and policy regimes (WADA; alcohol policy). Key empirical claims are footnoted to authoritative sources. (UNODC)
  • Assessment target. BA Sociology (7th semester) — Goal grade: 1.3 (Sehr gut).
  • Model fit for this task. Drafting/structure: GPT-5 Thinking. Polish & consistency check: GPT-Pro.

1) Classical Marxism: Commodity, surplus value, prohibition

Marx’s core insight is that commodities mediate social relations under capital; production for exchange governs value and extraction of surplus (Marx, Capital, Vol. I). Illegalization does not erase commodity form; it shifts the relation between constant/variable capital and risk. Bans push distribution into high-risk circuits where surplus profits accrue to actors who can best manage violence, secrecy, and corruption. Legal intoxicants (alcohol) stay inside taxable circuits; illegal ones move outside formal registers but still feed accumulation (finance, real estate laundering, carceral industries). (PenguinRandomhouse.com)

2) Modern political economy: Accumulation, policing, and the “war on drugs”

Critical political economy shows how border regimes, policing, and financial compliance co-produce markets. Smuggling and anti-smuggling have been constitutive for capitalist expansion, not mere “deviations” (Andreas, OUP). Penal expansion then converts illicit economies into carceral rents and precarious labor arrangements. In short: prohibition reorganizes, rather than eliminates, accumulation opportunities. (Oxford University Press)

3) Global geography: Suppliers, consumers, substitutions

  • Cocaine. Record-high production and expanding consumer bases: major demand in North America, Western/Central Europe, parts of South America (UNODC 2025 key findings; Reuters summary). Supplier zones remain Andean; trafficking adapts to enforcement via maritime routing and European ports. (UNODC)
  • Opiates. After Afghanistan’s 2023 collapse in opium output (Taliban ban), Myanmar’s production rose—global output fell sharply overall, but regional substitution intensified (price/supply shifts). (unis.unvienna.org)
  • Synthetics. Meth/ATS and fentanyl proliferate due to low fixed capital, mobile precursor supply chains, and scalable clandestine labs—typical late-capitalist just-in-time production with high mark-ups. (See UNODC WDR key findings for synthetics.) (UNODC)
    Heuristic: supplier regions cluster where state capacity is uneven and the opportunity cost of illicit agriculture/chemistry is low; consumer markets concentrate in higher-income regions with purchasing power and established nightlife/white-collar demand.

4) Socialist organization: What would (and wouldn’t) change

Historically, socialist states often monopolized alcohol as fiscal and social control while criminalizing other drugs; campaigns like Gorbachev’s anti-alcohol drive show that state capacity can sharply re-shape consumption and mortality—but also generate black markets and fiscal shocks when policy reverses. A socialist health-first regime could: (a) decommodify treatment, (b) regulate/monopolize production for harm reduction, c) reduce policing rents and profiteering from scarcity. Yet risks remain: paternalism, surveillance, and informal markets if preferences persist. (On the 1985–88 campaign’s effects, see Bhattacharya, Gathmann & Miller.) (American Economic Association)

5) Bourdieu: “Tell me your drug and I’ll tell you your class”

Bourdieu’s habitus and capitals (economic, cultural, social, symbolic) help map taste boundaries: who can afford which risks, which settings confer distinction, and how stigma distributes. Powder cocaine and prescription stimulants often appear as “white-collar” drugs with controlled rituals and lower street visibility; crack/heroin historically code as stigmatized in subordinated classes and racialized spaces, with policing amplifying inequalities (Bourgois; Reinarman & Levine). Distinction is reproduced through venues, vocabularies, and conversion rates between capitals. (Harvard University Press)

6) Leistungsdrogen: Doping, stimulants, and the promise of efficiency

From university libraries to trading floors and endurance sports, “enhancement” drugs are folded into productivity cultures. Vrecko shows student users frame stimulants as motivational regulation as much as cognition—making them fit neoliberal self-optimization scripts. In sport, WADA codifies a global prohibition regime that also produces market niches (designer substances, masking agents, testing tech). These are not anti-markets; they are regulatory markets. (Europe PMC)

7) Policy paradox: Alcohol allowed, others forbidden

Public health evidence ranks alcohol as a major driver of population harm, yet it remains normalized, advertised, and fiscally central—because states can tax it, firms can brand it, and rituals embed it. Meanwhile, illicit drugs with heterogeneous risk profiles are blanket-criminalized, pushing harms down the class gradient (policing, incarceration) while shielding legal producers of alcohol from equivalent stigma. (Synthesis: Babor et al.; Zinberg’s “drug, set, setting” explains why legality ≠ safety.) (OUP Academic)

8) What a socialist alternative might prioritize (program sketch)

  1. Decommodified care (treatment on demand; safe supply for high-risk opioids).
  2. Public monopoly or strict non-profit licensing for intoxicants with pricing to minimize harm.
  3. Regulatory parity: evidence-based classification across alcohol, nicotine, cannabis, stimulants, psychedelics (no fiscal favoritism for the most harmful).
  4. Risk redistribution: shift from punitive policing to occupational safety (for sex workers, couriers, chemists coerced into labs), and investment in alternative livelihoods in supplier regions.
  5. Stigma reduction via class-aware prevention (different ritual ecologies and risks across fields).

Practice heuristics (for students & policy labs)

  • Map a drug’s full commodity chain (inputs, labor, violence, finance) before debating legalization.
  • Always compare legal and illegal intoxicants on the same harm metrics.
  • Treat doping/enhancement as a work-discipline issue, not just deviance.
  • Use Bourdieu to anticipate who benefits from decriminalization models (fees, licensure, retail geography).

Sociology Brain Teasers

  1. If alcohol entered today’s EU market with no history, which regulatory class would evidence justify—and who would lobby otherwise?
  2. Does “safe supply” decommodify harm—or re-commodify care?
  3. Which field (sport, finance, academia) turns “Leistungsdrogen” into symbolic capital most efficiently, and why?
  4. Could a socialist alcohol monopoly avoid reproducing classed taste hierarchies?
  5. Where does detection tech (anti-doping, drug testing) create new rents, and for whom?
  6. In a world of synthetics, are “producer” and “consumer” regions converging?
  7. Is stigma a price control by other means?

Transparency & AI (co-author disclosure)

This article was drafted with an AI assistant for structure, accuracy checks, and literature surfacing. Empirical anchors include UNODC WDR (2024–2025), OUP/HUP/Yale/Cambridge publisher pages, and WADA documents. No personal or sensitive data about individuals were used. Internal project standards for disclosure and header images were followed.

Literature (APA, publisher-first links)

Prüfprotokoll

  • Status: v1.0 (concept essay + references).
  • Checks: Consistency of Marx/Bourdieu framing; global data cross-checked (UNODC 2024–2025); policy anchors added (WADA, OUP/HUP).
  • Next steps: Add two short comparative boxes (Portugal decriminalization; Canada safe supply) + a figure on “risk-profit curve under prohibition vs regulation.”
  • Date: 10 Nov 2025.

Publishable version of the prompt

“Good Morning, let’s today write something for sociology-of-addiction blog: Let’s do a Marxist (classical and modern) analysis of drug markets in capitalist systems and what the difference might be to socialist organization. Consider the global situation where are the supplier markets where the consumer ones. where are moments of exploitation. Also consider leistungsdrogen like doping or cocaine as white drugs and so on. triangulate with alcohol as allowed and other substances as fobidden. wirte about these pradoxies. also consider bourdieu: tell me your drug and i’ll tell you your class.”

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