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Abstract
A 'risk environment' framework promotes an understanding of harm, and harm reduction,
as a matter of 'contingent causation'. Harm is contingent upon social context, comprising
interactions between individuals and environments. There is a momentum of interest
in understanding how the relations between individuals and environments impact on
the production and reduction of drug harms, and this is reflected by broader debates
in the social epidemiology, political economy, and sociology of health. This essay
maps some of these developments, and a number of challenges. These include: social
epidemiological approaches seeking to capture the socially constructed and dynamic
nature of individual-environment interactions; political-economic approaches giving
sufficient attention to how risk is situated differentially in local contexts, and
to the role of agency and experience; understanding how public health as well as harm
reduction discourses act as sites of 'governmentality' in risk subjectivity; and focusing
on the logics of everyday habits and practices as a means to understanding how structural
risk environments are incorporated into experience. Overall, the challenge is to generate
empirical and theoretical work which encompasses both 'determined' and 'productive'
relations of risk across social structures and everyday practices. A risk environment
approach brings together multiple resources and methods in social science, and helps
frame a 'social science for harm reduction'.