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What's New
CNN's Lou Dobbs Is Clueless When It Comes to the Drug War Newman, Tony, AlterNet. May 16, 2008. Lou Dobbs talks nonsense to explain Mexican drug violence. Face it: Drug prohibition creates a profit motive that people are willing to kill for. |
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IHRA Launch ‘Global State of Harm Reduction 2008’ Report Cook, Catherine and Kanaef, Natalya. International Harm Reduction Association; May 12, 2008: pp. 130. To coincide with Harm Reduction 2008: IHRA’s 19th International Conference in Barcelona, IHRA have launched a major new report entitled ‘Global State of Harm Reduction 2008: Mapping the response to drug-related HIV and hepatitis C epidemics’. This report consolidates existing data on drug use, HIV and hepatitis C, documents harm reduction policies and practices worldwide, and records the activities of relevant multi-lateral agencies (such as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime). |
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Letter From Vancouver Mayor in Support of Insite Sullivan, Sam. Vancouver. Office of the Mayor. May 9, 2008. On the eve of Vancouver's supervised injection site's operating permit expiring, Mayor Sullivan writes this letter in support of the project. |
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Random Student Drug Testing is Not the Answer Kern, Jennifer, Huffington Post. May 7, 2008. The drug czar's staff is touring the country hosting summits designed to entice local educators to start drug testing their students -- randomly and without cause. Today the road show comes home and D.C. |
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Targeting Blacks: Drug Law Enforcement and Race in the United States Gorwin, Ian and Baldwin, Clive, Eds. Human Rights Watch; May 1, 2008. In the 67-page report, “Targeting Blacks: Drug Law Enforcement and Race in the United States,” Human Rights Watch documents with detailed new statistics persistent racial disparities among drug offenders sent to prison in 34 states. All of these states send black drug offenders to prison at much higher rates than whites. |
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Disparity by Geography King, Ryan S.. The Sentencing Project; May 2008: pp. 45. The Sentencing Project’s 45-page study, “Disparity by Geography: The War on Drugs in America’s Cities,” is the first city-level analysis of drug arrests, examining data from 43 of the nation’s largest cities between 1980 and 2003. The study found that, since 1980, the rate of drug arrests in American cities for African Americans increased by 225 percent, compared to 70 percent among whites. Black arrest rates grew by more than 500 percent in 11 cities during this period. |
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Anti-Drug Task Force Funding Leads to Police Corruption and Destruction of Lives Papa, Anthony, Huffington Post. April 29, 2008. In early March, a federally-funded narcotics task force struggling to increase its fiscal support carried out a crime sweep in 41 states. The sweep resulted in 4,200 arrests, with police seizing large amounts of cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamine. Why a massive raid? |
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Vancouver's INSITE Service and Other Supervised Injection Sites: What Has Been Learned from Research? Ministry of Health, Government of Canada; March 31, 2008. This report, written by a Canadian Expert Advisory Committee, found Vancouver's safe injection site to be a significant source of harm reduction services to the injection drug using community. |
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Marijuana Arrest Crusade Levine, Harry G. and Small, Deborah Peterson. New York Civil Liberties Union, pp. 106. April 29, 2008. From 1997 to 2006, the New York City Police Department arrested and
jailed more than 353,000 people simply for possessing small amounts of marijuana.
This was eleven times more marijuana arrests than in the previous decade,
and ten times more than in the decade before that. |
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Nothing About Us Without Us Jurgens, Ralf and International HIV/AIDS Alliance, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network. Open Society Institute; April 2008: pp. 83. Greater, meaningful involvement of people who use illegal drugs: A public health, ethical, and human rights imperative. |
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