shifts and oscillations in upper-level drug traffickers’ careers adler & adler

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Part VIII Chapter 46

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Part VIII Chapter 46. Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler. Part 8: Ch. 46. Focus on “burning out” of deviance, specifically exiting drug trafficking - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Part VIIIChapter 46

Page 2: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Focus on “burning out” of deviance, specifically exiting drug trafficking

Upper echelon marijuana & cocaine dealers & smugglers who were initially attracted to drug trafficking eventually find drawbacks of lifestyle exceeds rewards

Previous research focused on low & middle levels of drug smuggling (Anonymous, 1969; Atkyns & Hanneman, 1974; Blum, 1972; Carey, 1968; Goode, 1970; Langer, 1977; Lieb & Olson, 1976; Mouledoux, 1972; and Waldorf et al., 1977)

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 3: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 4: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Total of 65 smugglers & dealers were observed (N = 65) Half earned up to three-quarters of a

million a yearOther half continually struggled in

business, either breaking even or losing money

Based in “Southwest County” – section of large metropolitan area in southwestern California near Mexico border

Marijuana obtained in Mexico & cocaine in Colombia, Bolivia & Peru purchasing between 10 & 40 kilos at a time

Drugs imported to US by land, sea & airPart 8: Ch. 46

Page 5: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Middled: transferring to another buyer for small, immediate profit ($2-$5 per kilo for marijuana & $5k per kilo for cocaine)

Straight dealing: no middleman entailedWholesale marijuana dealers: bought

directly from smugglers buying 300 – 1,000 “bricks” & selling in lots of 100 – 300 bricks (avg. a kilo in weight)

Multi-kilo dealers: not smugglers’ first connections, but bought 100 – 300 bricks & sold in 25 -100 brick quantities

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 6: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Marijuana prices dependent on following:Purchase costDistance it was transportedAmount of risk assumedQuality of marijuana

Cocaine prices much more predictable:$10,000 purchasing a kilo, sold for about

$60,000“Pound” dealers cut in quantities of

pounds ($30,000) or 1/2 pound ($15,000) & sold them to “ounce” dealers who then sold them to “cut ounce” deals ($2,000 per oz) Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 7: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Pursued drug trafficking as full-time occupation

If involved in other businesses, they were usually maintained to provide them with legitimate front for security purposes

Profits depended on individual’s style of operation, reliability, security & amount of product he or she consumed

Business activities varied, but they clustered together for business & social relations

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 8: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Smugglers & dealers banded together & pursued “fast” lifestyle emphasizing:Intensive partyingCasual sexExtensive travelAbundant drug consumptionLavish spending on consumer goods

At this level, drug world was homogenousParticipants predominantly white, from

middle-class backgrounds & previous criminal involvement

Included men & women, but most menAges 25 to 40 years

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 9: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Drew on snowball sampling techniquesLargely by accidentResearchers became friendly with group

of neighbors who turned out to be heavily involved in smuggling marijuana

Use of key informants to gain trust of other members

Old ladies: girlfriends or wives of dealers & smugglers

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 10: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 11: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Despite gratifications originally derived from easy money, material comfort, freedom, prestige & power, 90% of those observed decided to quit the businessStemmed in part from initial perceptions of

career as temporaryRapid aging in the careerTired of living the fugitive lifeDisengaging rarely an abrupt act

Rarely successful in making it legitimately because they failed to cut down on extravagant lifestyle & drug consumption

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 12: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Many abandoned efforts to reform & returned to deviance, sometimes picking up where they left off & other times shifting to new mode of operatingExample: Dealing cocaine to dealing

marijuanaShifted role within same group of traffickers

Series of phase-outs & reentries, combined with career shifts endured for years, dominating pattern of their remaining involvement with the business

But also represented method by which many eventually broke away from trafficking

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 13: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Once established in drug world, dealers & smugglers entered middle phase of aging in careerCharacterized by loss of enchantment with

occupationResult of both extended exposure to

mundane, everyday business aspects & exorbitant consumption of drugs (esp. cocaine)

Frenzy of overstimulation & resulting exhaustion hastened process of “burnout”

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 14: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Dealers & smugglers generally repressed awareness of danger.

But result of accumulating “scares” increased feelings of “paranoia”

They also grew progressively weary of their exclusion from legitimate world & deceptions they had to manage to sustain separation

Feeling of being “expatriated citizen within one’s own country”

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 15: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

(1) Hedonistic & materialistic satisfactions the drug world provided

(2) Dealers & smugglers identified with, and developed commitment to, occupation of drug trafficking – self images tied to role & couldn’t be easily disengaged

(3) Dealers & smugglers hesitated to voluntarily quite field because of difficulty involved in finding another way to make a living

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 16: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Dealers & smugglers trying to leave drug world fell into one of four patterns:(1) Postpone quitting until after they

could execute one last “big deal(2) Planning to change immediately but

never did(3) Suspending their dealing & smuggling

activities, but didn’t replace them an alternative source of income

(4) Try to move into another line of work

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 17: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Phasing out of drug world was more often than not temporary

For most, it represented but another stage of their drug careers

Most forced out of were anxious to return

Coming back from financial, legal & reputational bustouts was possible difficult & was not always successfully accomplished

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 18: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

About 10% began tapering off drug world involvement gradually

40% experienced a “bustout” – forced withdrawals, which were usually sudden & motivated by external factors

Legal bustouts generally occurred when dealers or smugglers were either “burned” or “ripped off” by others, leaving them in too much debt to rebuild their operationsDeath was ultimate bustout

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 19: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Returning from bustouts usually entailed trial period where they had to reestablish trust & reliability

Voluntary reentry involved easier process

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 20: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Whether forced out or voluntary bustout, they didn’t always return on same level of transacting or commodity which characterized previous style of operation

Many underwent a “career shift” & became involved in some new segment of drug world

A final alternative involved neither completely leaving nor remaining within deviant world – a continual “dabbling” in drug trafficking

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 21: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 22: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Oscillation into & out of active drug trafficking makes it difficult to speak of leaving – a final retirement

Those forced out had difficult time returning given that bustouts were damaging, with attempted reentries usually unsuccessful

Nonetheless it was difficult to ascertain whether leaving was temporary or permanent

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 23: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

What distinguishes upper-level drug dealers & smugglers from middle & low-level ones?

What factors contributed to leaving the drug world? Why was it difficult to do so?

Part 8: Ch. 46

Page 24: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Part VIIIChapter 47

Page 25: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Some identity careers have “highly articulated” (Glaser & Strauss, 1971) durations marked by explicit entrances & exits

Some, like emotional disorder labels, don’t given that the sensations & experiences that qualify as symptoms tend to be internally located & lack visible boundaries; thus they are highly subjective

The present study explores subjective self-meanings of those identified with emotional disorder labels & no longer do (delabelers)

Part 8: Ch. 47

Page 26: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Part 8: Ch. 47

Page 27: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

In-depth interviews with 40 individuals claiming to be delabelers (N = 40)

Individuals formerly identified with range of emotional disorder labels such as:AnorexicCodependentBipolarAgoraphobic

Narratives offer insight into changing subjective meanings of disorder identities over time as well as exits (from such labels)

Part 8: Ch. 47

Page 28: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Only criterion for being considered labeler:Formerly labeled with emotional disorder

either professionally or “self-labeled”Thus being a delabeler not necessarily

synonymous with being “cured” – just that individual no longer uses label as source of identity

Use of snowball sampling & advertisements with flyers

Informants from 10 different statesPrimarily female (n = 31)Ages 20 to 69 years

Part 8: Ch. 47

Page 29: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

One-third over age 50Half in social service, mental health or

other health-related professionGender skew attributed to feminization

of psychotherapy and mental healthDisorders & conditions predominantly

resemble DSM-IV-TR criteria of mental disordersDiagnostic & Statistical Manual of Mental

DisordersMajority identified with labels for <10

years, while 11 delabelers report having identified for 10+ years

Page 30: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler
Page 31: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Identity exit fraught with intra- & interpersonal conflicts that make process emotionally difficult

Obstacles of disidentifying illustrated on existential, interactional & cultural levels

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Page 33: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Several delabelers went through period of questioning “Who am I now?” after deciding to disidentify with labels

Disidentifying from emotional disorder labels doesn’t involve adopting a new, labeled status, instead the transition moves exiting individual from a highly “marked,” culturally recognized status to completely “unmarked” non-identityThus it requires simple forfeit of known

identity, which can be destabilizing for most

Faced with identity void

Page 34: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Disassociating with group identity (i.e., support groups) can trigger feelings of guilt & fear, which are associated with issues of loyalty to group

Deserter complex: results from considering leaving group

Reverse Stigmatization: fear of being ostracized by group for choosing to disidentify with label

Page 35: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

Delabelers describe cultural pressure to remain identified as “disordered”

Narratives reflect cultural trend of assuming that label is needed in order to understand & cope with life’s difficultiesThe increased psychologization of every

day life has borne an explosion in number of therapeutic practitioners & therapeutic self-help groups; and expert domain of psychological professionals & popular self-help culture & media representations further reinforces cultural preoccupation with therapeutics

Page 36: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

This potential is suggested in several delabelers’ narratives that reveal internalization of their disease concept of emotional behavior, which made disidentifying especially difficult

Page 37: Shifts and Oscillations in Upper-Level Drug  Traffickers’ Careers Adler & Adler

What factors influence the process of disidentifying with emotional disorders so difficult?

What specific obstacles do delabelers face and to what extent can this be attributed to socialization and society?