Addiction research
Documents
EU drug markets report: a strategic analysis
Date added: | 02/22/2013 |
Date modified: | 02/25/2013 |
Filesize: | 4.1 MB |
Downloads: | 2489 |
Authors: EMCDDA and EUROPOL
The EU drug markets report is the first comprehensive overview of illicit drug markets in the European Union. It covers issues such as production, consumer markets, trafficking, organised crime and policy responses, along with a review of the markets for heroin, cocaine, cannabis, amphetamine, methamphetamine, ecstasy and new psychoactive substances. It concludes with concrete action points for the areas where the current EU response to the drug market and its consequent harms may be improved.
An essential reference tool for law enforcement professionals, policymakers, the academic community and the general public, the report combines Europol’s strategic and operational understanding of trends and developments in organised crime with the EMCDDA’s ongoing monitoring and analysis of the drug phenomenon in Europe and beyond.
Commentaries on Taylor & Dhillon (2013)
Date added: | 02/19/2013 |
Date modified: | 02/19/2013 |
Filesize: | 73 kB |
Downloads: | 2085 |
Author: Robin Room (Stockholm University, University of Melbourne and Turning Point Alcohol and Drug Centre)
Article by Professor Robin Room from the Turning Point Alcohol and Drug Centre (Australia) in response to the publication "An international legal strategy for alcohol control: not a framework convention—at least not yet" by authors Allyn L. Taylor and Ibadat S. Dhillon.
An international legal strategy for alcohol control: not a framework convention—at least not yet
Date added: | 02/19/2013 |
Date modified: | 04/02/2013 |
Filesize: | Unknown |
Downloads: | 2201 |
Authors: Allyn L. Taylor and Ibadat S. Dhillon
The perceived success of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) in influencing national and global public health policies has led to growing interest in promulgating new international legal instruments to address global health issues—including calls for a Framework Convention on Alcohol Control (FCAC).The authors propose a gradual international legal strategy for alcohol control, starting with a non-binding code of practice focusing on areas of critical concern with wide political consensus, leading over time to a comprehensive binding treaty.
GAPA - WHO Statement of Concern
Date added: | 02/18/2013 |
Date modified: | 02/25/2013 |
Filesize: | 172.36 kB |
Downloads: | 2183 |
Full title: GAPA Statement of Concern - The international public health community responds to the global alcohol producers' attempts to influence the WHO global strategy on the harmful use of alcohol
Author: GAPA
On October 8th 2012, thirteen of world’s largest alcohol producers issued a set of commitments to reduce the harmful use of alcohol worldwide, ostensibly in support of the World Health Organization’s 2010 Global Strategy to Reduce the Harmful Use of Alcohol.
The Global Alcohol Policy Alliance (GAPA), as an independent coalition of public health professionals, health scientists and NGO representatives, submitted this public Statement of Concern to the WHO Secretariat in response to the activities of the global alcohol producers. Discussions on industry involvement at the AMPHORA project final conference have contributed to this document.
The Relationship between Minimum Alcohol Prices, Outlet Densities and Alcohol Attributable Deaths...
Date added: | 02/18/2013 |
Date modified: | 02/19/2013 |
Filesize: | Unknown |
Downloads: | 2386 |
Full title: The Relationship between Minimum Alcohol Prices, Outlet Densities and Alcohol Attributable Deaths in British Columbia, 2002 to 2009
Authors: Jinhui Zhao, Tim Stockwell, Gina Martin, Scott Macdonald, Kate Vallance, Andrew Treno, William R. Ponicki, Andrew Tu and Jane Buxton.
The aim of this study was to investigate relationships between periodic increases in minimum alcohol prices, changing densities of liquor stores and alcohol attributable (AA) deaths in British Columbia, Canada. The findings of this research show that increases in the minimum price of alcohol in British Columbia, Canada, between 2002 and 2009 were associated with immediate and delayed decreases in alcohol attributable mortality. By contrast, increases in the density of private liquor stores were associated with increases in alcohol attributable mortality.