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44 Crime L. & Soc. Change 1 (2005)

handle is hein.journals/crmlsc44 and id is 1 raw text is: Crime, Law & Social Change (2005) 44: 1-18
DOI: 10.1007/s10611-006-9014-8                               © Springer 2006
Ecstasy in the city: Synthetic drug markets in Europe
The outcomes of a field research
MONICA MASSARI
Department of Sociology and Political Science, University of Calabria, Italy
(e-mail: massarimonica@netscape.net)
Abstract. How do new drug markets develop and operate? Which are the characteristics
of synthetic drug suppliers? How are they organized, owned and managed? This article sum-
marizes the outcomes of a cross-national study which investigated three urban synthetic drug
markets at a different stage of development: Amsterdam, Barcelona and Turin. The study - the
first of this type in Europe - outlines a composite picture which clearly indicates the presence
of rather flexible and dynamic actors and a quasi free drug economy. Hence, the role played
by more structured, mafia-type organizations, even in Italy, needs to be reconceived. The wide
use of primary sources, altogether the adoption of qualitative interpretative tools, contributed
to shed some light on a phenomenon which is still poorly investigated both at national and
international levels.
Introduction
Although biases and limitations are an unavoidable component of any research
process, it is worth mentioning that the greatest problem in studying drug
markets - as well as similar businesses - is that they are, by nature, illegal and
mostly hidden activities. Official data sometimes provides only partial and
incomplete information, while qualitative research often relies on just a few
cases representing only a small part of the situation under investigation. In
the case of synthetic drugs supply, the issue has received very little attention
from the international scientific community.
This article contains the outcomes of a field research on synthetic drug
markets in three European cities: Amsterdam (The Netherlands), Barcelona
(Spain) and Turin (Italy).1 The general question examined by the research
teams was how the various actors supplying and distributing synthetic drugs
to the illegal urban markets are organized, owned and managed, with special
attention paid to the larger social context in which they operate. From the
outset, it was clear the three markets investigated were at different stages of
development due to the peculiar evolution patterns of the local drug scenes.
being the first two cities located within major international trafficking routes
while the third in a more peripheral position. Furthermore, the bulk of studies,

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