Theorizing otherness, the war
on drugs and incarceration
BIKO AGOZINO
Indiana University of Pennsylvania, USA
Abstract
The notion of ‘black drug couriers’ in prison suggests that theories
of penology, criminology and victimology should move beyond
their preoccupation with the individual offender. This is (not just
because of the plural sense of ‘couriers’ but more importantly)
because some of what is conceptualized as punishment goes
beyond individual offenders to affect whole groups and categories
who could be innocent. The article theorizes victimization as mere
punishment by looking at institutional practices that are deliberately
designed to exclude, marginalize, control, alienate or even victimize
the imprisoned Other. The crime-centredness of criminology is
almost unavoidable with reference to illicit drugs and black
immigrants because spatial mobility is expected to imply anomie,
social disorganization or, at least, culture shock with all the
predictable incidence of deviance that could be associated with
exposure to a different culture. This article will critically review this
apparent truism with a view to highlighting possible ‘drugs war
crimes’ of unjustifiable stereotypes and victimization as mere
punishment mainly against innocent people in prison.
Key Words
black people • drugs war • immigration • innocence
• marginalization • offenders • prison populations
• punishment • victimization
Theoretical Criminology
© 2000 SAGE Publications
London, Thousand Oaks
and New Delhi.
1362–4806(200008)4:3
Vol. 4(3): 359–376; 013517
359