Drugs

Must Read

IWPR: Afghan Opium: A Failed Jihad?

Authors: Jean MacKenzie, Wahidullah Amani, and Sayed Yaqub Ibrahimi

This report the Institute for War and Peace Reporting argues that corruption, lack of security, and poor coordination will combine to torpedo the counter-narcotics effort in Afghanistan.

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Analysis Brief

Colombia's 'Drugs and Thugs'

Under President Alvaro Uribe's "democratic security" initiative, data suggests security in Colombia has improved significantly. But the country remains the world's biggest producer of cocaine, the rebel group FARC controls many rural areas, and paramilitaries show signs of regrouping.

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Task Force Report No. 12

Rethinking International Drug Control

Despite the growing severity of the drug abuse problem in the United States and evidence that supply-control programs are ineffective, the supply-side approach to drug control has endured. This task force examined interdiction and source country programs in terms of their impact on the domestic availability of the targeted illicit drugs. The group's report, Rethinking International Drug Control, urged policymakers to reassess the effectiveness of interdiction and the certification process, and to consider adopting a strategy that focuses on strengthening democratic institutions at home and abroad, developing multilateral drug-control efforts, and reducing domestic demand.

See more in Europe/Russia, Drugs