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Jack Shuler

    Jack Shuler est un auteur et journaliste dont le travail explore les complexités de la société américaine, abordant souvent des thèmes tels que les droits de l'homme et la justice sociale. Il apporte une rigueur d'érudit, informée par son étude de la littérature américaine et du journalisme narratif, à ses essais et reportages captivants. Shuler enquête sur les luttes persistantes pour la liberté et l'égalité, en examinant à la fois les événements historiques et les crises contemporaines. Son écriture se caractérise par un profond engagement envers l'expérience américaine et une volonté de découvrir la vérité.

    This Is Ohio
    • This Is Ohio

      • 304pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,2(113)Évaluer

      Every overdose is a policy failure. Such is the guiding element of journalist Jack Shuler’s new book, one that explores the current addiction crisis as a human rights problem fostered by poverty and inadequate health care. Tainted drug supplies, inadequate civic responses, and prevailing negative opinions about people who use drugs, the poor, and those struggling with mental health issues lead to thousands of preventable deaths each year while politicians are slow to adopt effective policies. Putting themselves at great personal risk (and often breaking the law to do so), the brave men and women profiled in This Is Ohio–a coalition of people who use drugs, mothers, and allies–are mounting a grassroots effort to combat ineffective and often incorrect ideas about addiction and instead focus on saving lives through commonsense harm reduction policies.Opioids are the current face of addiction, but as Shuler shows, the crisis in our midst is one that has long been fostered by income inequality, the loss of manufacturing jobs across the Rust Belt, and lack of access to health care. What is playing out in Ohio today isn’t only about opioids, but rather a decades-long economic and sociological shift in small towns all across the United States. It’s also about a larger culture of stigma at the heart of how we talk about addiction. What happens in Ohio will have ramifications felt across the nation and for decades to come.

      This Is Ohio