Available From UC Press

Stabilizing Empire

Psychopharmacy in the US War on Terror
Jocelyn Lim Chua

In 2006, the United States Department of Defense for the first time authorized the use of FDA-approved psychiatric medications in the physical and tactical spaces of military operations including active combat. This policy change overturned a century of military psychiatry orthodoxy, which prioritized non-pathologizing, non-medication treatment for combat stress. Amid an ongoing global war, the US military embraced psychopharmacy as a radical and untested tool for keeping soldiers on the counterinsurgency battlefield and deploying them again and again, even with psychiatric diagnoses. Through powerful storytelling and original analysis, Stabilizing Empire uncovers a quiet revolution during the war on terror: the pharmaceuticalization of battlefield mental health care.

Jocelyn Lim Chua is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and author of In Pursuit of the Good Life: Aspiration and Suicide in Globalizing South India.