The Geopolitical Inversion of Blame in the Global Drug Economy | ChatGPT5.1 & NotebookLM

The dominant international framing of the illicit drug trade locates primary responsibility in producer and transit states of the Global South, frequently designated as “narco-states” or sites of endemic criminality. This article argues that such framings constitute a systematic geopolitical inversion of blame that obscures the true structural drivers of the global drug economy. Drawing on political economy, public health, and international relations scholarship, the analysis demonstrates that the global drug trade is fundamentally demand-driven, sustained by persistent consumption in high-income economies, amplified by prohibition-engineered profit structures, and enabled by financial systems concentrated in global economic centers (Becker & Murphy, 1988; Caulkins & Reuter, 2010; UNODC, 2023). Violence, corruption, and institutional degradation are structurally displaced into peripheral states functioning as risk sinks, while profits concentrate in financial hubs (Keefer & Loayza, 2010; Levi & Reuter, 2006). Drug-based state designations are shown to operate not primarily as epidemiological or criminological classifications, but as instruments of geopolitical authority (Biersteker & Eckert, 2012; Carpenter, 2003). The article concludes that durable reform requires a reassignment of responsibility toward demand governance, financial transparency, and international burden-sharing.

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