The
scholarly article I chose for PB2A is called “Slowly Learning the Hard Way:
U.S. America’s War on Drugs and Implications for Mexico” written by Glen Olives
Thompson. As the title is very straightforward, you can determine what the
paper is going to discuss: the drug war in America. There is nothing interesting
about the title and unlike many other genres of writing, there is no “hook”
sentence to draw in readers.
This
scholarly article is separated into clearly labeled sections, each giving a
preview to what the section will discuss. The first section is called “Abstract.”
The purpose of this section is to give brief background information and present
the reason for writing the paper. In this article, the abstract gives some brief
background information on America’s drug policy. The first line of the paper is
“U.S. America's aggressive drug enforcement policy, costing over US$1 trillion
and putting millions of people in prison for casual drug use, is an abject
failure.” This sentence presents the authors opinion on the drug policy and the
side that he will argue throughout the paper. The last sentence of the abstract
poses the question of how to reform this “failure” of a drug policy.
Next
is the “Introduction” section, where Thompson goes into further detail about
the history of drug use and trends relating to prohibition or legalization of
certain drugs. He explains that “for U.S. legislators, making certain
psychoactive drugs illegal, regulating others, and leaving others still unregulated,
requires a difficult balancing act, and an easy one to get wrong.” He argues
that if alcohol, which is the third highest preventable cause of death in the
United States, can be regulated, that other drugs such as cannabis, cocaine,
and opiates should be regulated in a similar manner.
From
there, he goes on to talk about how history shows that prohibiting a drug doesn’t
stop it from being used in a third section titled “The First War on Drugs: Alcohol
Prohibition in the United States.” In his next section, “The Current War on
Drugs: History and Consequences,” he describes how drugs such as marijuana were
prohibited and how the U.S. government has spent over a trillion dollars in the
drug enforcement efforts. The result was that our incarceration rates increased
tremendously. Thompson states “When a country has a prison population approaching
one percent of its residents, most of whom are incarcerated for non-violent, drug-related
crimes, spends billions of dollars a year on drug enforcement and prison
related activities, and yet has the highest rate of illegal drug use of any
country in the world, something is deeply out of balance.” He goes on to
explain that the more effective prohibition is at raising costs, the greater
are drug industry revenues. So, more effective prohibition means that drug
sellers have more money to buy guns, pay bribes, fund the dealers, and even
research and develop new technologies of drug delivery (like crack cocaine). He
states “It's hard to beat an enemy that gets stronger the more you strike
against him or her.” In another section, “Piecemeal Political Solutions,” he
explains how one could reform the drug policy. “Of course, the sensible thing
to do would be to repeal the Comprehensive Drug Abuse and Control Act and
replace it with liberalized drug policy where most drugs would be regulated and
controlled like alcohol and tobacco.” By doing this, Thomposn says that billions
of dollars could be saved, millions more earned through federal and state taxes,
and many millions more, formerly spent on drug prosecution offenses, could be
spent on drug education and rehabilitation. He supports this by telling readers
that other states that have done this, have had multiple benefits such as
decreased drug use and an increase in tax revenue from drug sales. In the “Conclusion”
section he sums up everything from throughout the paper in a brief, straightforward
manner.
Overall,
the author uses advanced vocabulary and an academic tone, demonstrating his
knowledge on the subject and has references throughout the whole article,
making readers trust him and believe he is credible. The format of the paper makes it easy for
readers to follow along, or even quickly get to a certain area of information
that they are interested in. Also, the article has footnotes, which the author
uses to give definitions or other background information. All of these rhetorical
devices used helps the author strengthen his argument, that the U.S. drug
policy should be reformed. Personally I think there are two specific aspects of
the article that are the most important -- the evidence and the argument -- because
they work together. Without the the argument, the evidence is just factual
information, and without the evidence and background information, the author’s
argument is very weak.
Hi, Jessica:
ReplyDeleteYou did a good job analysing the rhetorical features and conventions of your scholarly academic publication, Slowly Learning the Hard Way: U.S. America’s War on Drugs and Implications for Mexico written by Glen Olives Thompson. You specifically explained the purpose and the designed structure of each major parts, such as title, abstract, introduction, evidence and the analyse of the evidences, using direct quotations from the paper to enhance your own analyse. The titles of research papers are always very descriptive. And I completely agree with your idea about the importance of the evidence, that evidence makes the argument strong.
Dear Jessica,
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed reading your analysis about the article because it is very insightful and also very easy to read. In your analysis, I really like how your responses is structured because it flows really well, breaking the article apart from beginning to end. For example, your introduction analysis was very spot on, guiding us the readers into what the article is about and into the rest of your paragraph. Your analysis of the article was spot on as well, because I always feel like that’s something I lack at and reading your project builder allowed me to have a greater understanding of how an analysis should look like. Thank you!
Jessica,
ReplyDeleteThe topic you are analyzing sounds super interesting! I love the way you've structured your piece; it's super easy to follow and it's like I'm reading the article myself. Great use of quotations and evidence to support your explanation of conventions. Way to get specific on the footnotes observation too. I totally agree that the argument and evidence are the most important conventions. It was the same in my paper, without either the argument or evidence, the paper is weak. Great job!
Jaimee