Capitalism is not only an economic mode of production; it is also a form
of life. This also applies to a historical type of capitalism, which is the
capitalism founded on (illicit) drugs – in other words: narco-capitalism.
The article discusses how capitalism alters life at the nexus of drug production, trade and consumption through ...
Capitalism is not only an economic mode of production; it is also a form
of life. This also applies to a historical type of capitalism, which is the
capitalism founded on (illicit) drugs – in other words: narco-capitalism.
The article discusses how capitalism alters life at the nexus of drug production, trade and consumption through a study of drug heartlands in
Colombia, Afghanistan and Myanmar. What forms of life emerge under
narco-capitalism? And how do people seek change and express agency
in the exploitative conditions governed by narco-capital? To do so, the
article proceeds through the following sections: first, it elucidates its
definition of the ‘everyday’ as a conceptual and methodological scheme
to understand capitalist forms of life. Then it uses material collected
from people’s everyday encounter with narco-capitalism in Afghanistan,
Myanmar and Colombia to discuss mystification, predation and alienation. The article explores how capitalism produces forms of life that
make use of drugs and narco-capital to dispossess and alienate collectivities. Finally, the article argues that to move beyond this alienating
condition, drug wars and/or development are not a solution, because
drugs are not the problem. Instead, it is people’s organisation and
world-building in dialectical mode to capitalist forms of life that can
transform everyday life beyond predation and alienation.