A critical discursive psychology study of dehumanization and retributive justice in Duterte’s war on drugs
Mhaigne Ahne Lucañas, Kristina Celespara & Teresita T. Rungduin
Abstract
Former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte (2016-2022) launched the War on Drugs, a campaign spearheaded by Oplan Tokhang and linked to an estimated 12,000 to 30,000 deaths. Despite compelling evidence of human rights violations and violence against people, war on drugs was still supported among the people. Hence, the qualitative study addresses a critical gap on how the Filipino use language to adopt, resist, or negotiate dehumanization to justify or challenge the punitive measures of Duterte's War on Drugs. Drawing from the eight (8) interview data, the analysis identified four (4) dominant interpretative repertoires: (1) the pathologization and criminalization of Psychoactive Substance Use Disorders (PSUDs), (2) the framing of the War on Drugs as protective, ineffective, or unjust, (3) justice as either redemptive or retributive, and (4) media as a key determinant of public perception. The study highlights how discourse not only reflects but also reproduces the political and moral boundaries that define who is worthy of care and who becomes disposable. It underscores the urgent need to reframe substance use as a public health issue rooted in structural conditions, and to humanize PSUDs in both policy and public dialogue.
Keywords
dehumanization, retributive justice, PSUDs, war on drugs, social justice
Author information & Contribution
Mhaigne Ahne Lucañas. Corresponding author. Bachelor of Science-Master of Arts in Psychology and Counseling Straight Program, Philippine Normal University. Email: lucanas.mav@stud.pnu.edu.ph
Kristina Celespara. Bachelor of Science-Master of Arts in Psychology and Counseling Straight Program, Philippine Normal University. Email: celespara.k@stud.pnu.edu.ph
Teresita T. Rungduin. Vice President for Research and Quality Assurance, Philippine Normal University. Email: rungduin.tt@pnu.edu.ph
"Mhaigne Ahne Lucañas contributed to the conceptualization, methodology, investigation, data curation, formal analysis, writing of the original draft, and writing for review and editing. Kristina Celespara contributed to the conceptualization, methodology, investigation, data curation, formal analysis, writing of the original draft, and writing. Teresita Rungduin contributed through supervision, validation, and writing."
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Funding
This work was not supported by any funding.
Institutional Review Board Statement
This study was conducted in accordance with the ethical guidelines set by Philippine Normal University. The conduct of this study has been approved and given relative clearance(s) by the Philippine Normal University Research Ethics Committee with the research ethics code REC 2025-077.
Data and Materials Availability
The data supporting the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
AI Declaration
AI tools were not used in writing this paper.
Notes
Acknowledgement
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Cite this article:
Lucañas, M.A., Celespara, K. & Rungduin, T.T. (2026). A critical discursive psychology study of dehumanization and retributive justice in Duterte’s war on drugs. International Review of Social Sciences Research, 6(1), 134-155. https://doi.org/10.53378/irssr.353313
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