Termin realizacji zamówienia: ok. 16-18 dni roboczych.
Darmowa dostawa!
Taking the shifting global drug policy terrain as a starting point, this collection moves beyond debates about whether to reform drug policies to a focus on delivering ‘drug policy justice’.
Chapter 1: Towards Transformative Drug Policy Reform
Laura Garius, Imani Mason Jordan, Niamh Eastwood
Chapter 2: Drug Policy Reform and Human Rights Post-COVID-19
Kasia Malinowksa and Diederik Lohman
Chapter 3: Debunking the Three Myths About Reforming Asian Drug Policies
Michelle Miao and Gloria Lai
Part II: Tracking progress
Chapter 4: Lessons Learned from Legal Regulation of Cannabis
Zara Snapp, Jorge Herrera Valderrábano and Luis Daniel Santiago Vidargas
Chapter 5: The Regulation of Legal Drug Markets: Key Lessons from Alcohol Control Policy in Africa
Ediomo-Ubong E. Nelson and Isidore S. Obot
Chapter 6: Legal Epidemiology in Post-Prohibition Scenarios
Scott Burris, Corey S. Davis and Elizabeth Platt
Part III: Harm reduction in the changing landscape
Chapter 7: Harm Reduction Post-Prohibition
Naomi Burke-Shyne and Ajeng Larasati
Chapter 8: Can Darknet Drug Markets Be Harm Reducing? Building Decriminalised Spaces in Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia
Eliza Kurcevič
Chapter 9: Prisoner to Patient: The Pathologisation of People Who Use Drugs
Shaun Shelly and Sonja Pasche
Part IV: Emerging rights issues at the supply side
Chapter 10: Peasants’ Rights after the War on Drugs: The Case for Transformative Cannabis Regulations
Alejandro Rodríguez, Isabel Pereira and Luis Felipe Cruz
Chapter 11: Are Coca Crops Causing Deforestation in Colombia? Would a Future Regulated Market Impact the Environment?
María Alejandra Vélez
Part V: Reckoning with the past
Chapter 12: Consensus Breakdown and Recalcitrancy in the Drug Control System – Towards Disintegration or Re-Integration?
John Collins
Chapter 13: The Last Drug Warrior in the West: UK Drug policy and shifting material interests from the Nineteenth to the Twenty-first Century
Kojo Koram
Damon Barrett is a senior lecturer in human rights at the School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg, Sweden. He is co-Director of the International Centre on Human Rights and Drug Policy, based at the Human Rights Centre, University of Essex. His work has focused on what it means to adopt a human rights-based approach to drugs, with a particular focus on the rights of the child.
Rick Lines is Professor of Criminology in the Faculty of Social Sciences at Swansea University in Wales, where he is Co-Director of Global Drug Policy Observatory. He has been called ‘a key figure in the emerging field of human rights and drug policy’ and is Chair of the International Centre of Human Rights and Drug Policy at the University of Essex and author of Drug Control and Human Rights in International Law. In 2022 he joined Public Health Wales where he leads national policy, programming and research on drug use and harm reduction.