Disciplines
Law (20%); Sociology (80%)
Keywords
Illicit drug markets,
Cryptomarkets,
Digital technolgies,
Cybercrime,
Darknet,
Drug cultures
Abstract
Transnational illicit markets have been transformed by the digital revolution. They take
advantage of encryption technologies, smartphones, social media applications and
cryptocurrencies that protect the digital traces of buyers and sellers, posing new challenges to
drug control policies and public health alike. The volume Digital Transformations of Illicit
Drug Markets: Reconfiguration and Continuity considers how the digital revolution has
changed the selling and buying of illicit substances through increased convenience and
anonymisation.
Providing a uniquely interdisciplinary perspective, this book shows how the digital
transformation of illicit drug markets combines a reconfiguration of how sellers and buyers
interact in new markets alongside the continuity of embeddedness of market structures in
cultural, economic, political and legal realms. Emphasising that illicit digital markets are
embedded in societal structures and power relations in general, contributors also recognise
the importance of critical perspectives on inequalities between the Global North and South as
well as issues of gender.
Digital Transformations of Illicit Drug Markets: Reconfiguration and Continuity challenges
the field of criminology to recognise the limits of its traditional knowledge and move beyond
the preoccupations that restrict crime to certain fixed spaces in order to develop new
explanations.