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During the late nineteenth century, opium was integral to European colonial rule in Southeast Asia. The taxation of opium was a major source of revenue for British and French colonizers, who also derived moral authority from imposing a tax on a peculiar vice of their non-European subjects. Yet between the 1890s and the 1940s, colonial states began to ban opium, upsetting the very foundations of overseas rule—how did this happen? This talk by Diana Kim (assistant professor, Georgetown University) explores the history of this dramatic reversal and colonial legacies that set the stage for the region’s drug problems today.
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