Drugs: Policy And Politics: Policy and PoliticsMcGraw-Hill Education (UK), 2006 M05 1 - 143 páginas Drugs: Policy and Politics provides an important set of tools with which to rethink the diversity of drug use and drug users. The book examines the dynamic context of drug policy through discussions of broader policy fields such as health and the criminal justice system and offer evidence-based insights into the social complexities of both drug use and drug users. |
Contenido
Chapter 01 Social Exclusion Drugs and Policy | 1 |
Chapter 02 Gender Drugs and Policy | 18 |
Chapter 04 One Step Forward Two Steps Back? The Politics of Race1 and Drugs and How Policymakers Interpret Things | 45 |
Chapter 05 Drugs Law and the Regulation of Harm | 59 |
Chapter 06 Drugs Crime and Criminal Justice | 75 |
Chapter 07 Drugs and Health Policy | 92 |
Epidemiology and the Evolution of a European Drug Policy | 113 |
Chapter 09 Contemporary Social Theory in the Drugs Field | 125 |
139 | |
Back Cover | 144 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
ACMD agencies approach areas argued behaviour Berridge British System cannabis chapter cocaine Commission context criminal justice culture defined drug misuse drug policy drug problems drug services drug testing drug treatment drugs and crime drugs field Drugs Strategy Directorate EMCDDA employment ethnic European drug policy example findings first focus funding gender government’s harm reduction heroin Heroin Addiction Home Office homeless illicit drug individuals influence Internationaljournal ofDrug Policy issues Lart linked London Majesty’s Measham Misuse of Drugs National Treatment Agency needs Newburn offenders opiates Oxford Parker Police Foundation 2000 policy responses policy-makers political practice prison problem drug users programmes race equality recreational drug reduce reflected relation Report restorative justice risk role Routledge significant social exclusion Social Policy society space specific Stationery Office Stimson suggests Tackling Drugs treatment services University Press visible minorities women drug users young youth