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VERSION:2.0
METHOD:PUBLISH
PRODID:-//Telerik Inc.//Sitefinity CMS 15.1//EN
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TZID:Eastern Standard Time
BEGIN:STANDARD
DTSTART:20251102T020000
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYDAY=1SU;BYHOUR=2;BYMINUTE=0;BYMONTH=11
TZNAME:Eastern Standard Time
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
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BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
DTSTART:20250301T020000
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TZNAME:Eastern Daylight Time
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DESCRIPTION:Jennifer Carroll will speak about how in the last few years\, U
 kraine has borne witness to the major geopolitical crises of our decade: r
 evolution\, state-sponsored killings\, foreign invasion\, forceful occupat
 ion by a major world power\, and ongoing war. Based on more than a decade 
 of fieldwork in cities and villages across Ukraine\, Carroll’s ethnographi
 c research on substance use and treatment in the context of these crises a
 sks us to consider how the social values of “addiction” and “treatment” in
  Ukraine are entangled with broader discourses of policy\, identity and wa
 r. Demonstrating that drug policy is a key tool of statecraft\, Carroll wi
 ll discuss how social imaginations of people who use drugs facilitate thei
 r use (and abuse) in leveraging political authority\, demonstrating how gl
 obal health para-infrastructures\, state biopolitics\, citizenship and sov
 ereignty&nbsp\;are always enmeshed.
DTEND:20230406T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T210819Z
DTSTART:20230406T193000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Addiction Imaginaries: Drugs\, Sovereignty and Nine Years of Russia
 n Military Occupation in Ukraine
UID:RFCALITEM639141160990492365
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Jennifer Carroll will speak about how in th
 e last few years\, Ukraine has borne witness to the major geopolitical cri
 ses of our decade: revolution\, state-sponsored killings\, foreign invasio
 n\, forceful occupation by a major world power\, and ongoing war. </p><p>B
 ased on more than a decade of fieldwork in cities and villages across Ukra
 ine\, Carroll’s ethnographic research on substance use and treatment in th
 e context of these crises asks us to consider how the social values of “ad
 diction” and “treatment” in Ukraine are entangled with broader discourses 
 of policy\, identity and war. </p><p>Demonstrating that drug policy is a k
 ey tool of statecraft\, Carroll will discuss how social imaginations of pe
 ople who use drugs facilitate their use (and abuse) in leveraging politica
 l authority\, demonstrating how global health para-infrastructures\, state
  biopolitics\, citizenship and sovereignty&nbsp\;are always enmeshed.</p>
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