Como tem sido amplamente documentado, a violência contra as mulheres em nossos países, enraizada no sexismo e na discriminação estrutural, é aumentada pelo contexto de violência armada da região, o qual, por sua vez, está diretamente relacionado ao tráfico de drogas. Então, o combate ao aumento da violência contra as mulheres exige uma revisão urgente das políticas que proíbem o comércio de drogas.
The Sixth Summit of the Americas in Cartagena, Colombia, is the most important meeting of heads of states where, for the first time, alternatives to prohibition will be discussed.
The ARF launched a campaign to raise funds and buy a mobile van to reach disadvantaged young people in Moscow. The campaign calls attention to the lack of HIV prevention interventions among people who use drugs in the country.
The government of Colombia pushed on Saturday for the most far-reaching change to policy on drugs since US president Richard Nixon declared war on narcotics four decades ago.
Gil Kerlikowske, Director of National Drug Control Policy, released the 2012 National Drug Control Strategy, the Obama Administration’s primary blueprint for drug policy in the United States.
The Human Rights and Governance Grants Program supports more than 100 human rights–related organizations across Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union and Mongolia from its Human Rights Fund.
As a result of the Cartagena summit, for the first time a meaningful debate on developing and implementing drug control policies that are more humane and effective is underway.
Latin American leaders have said recently that the West’s "war on drugs" has failed, and a new book from the International Institute for Strategic Studies agrees. At this week’s launch of Drugs, Insecurity and Failed States: The Problems of Prohibition, IISS expert and former MI6 deputy director Nigel Inkster said a new approach was needed in which drugs were treated as an issue to be managed rather than as a problem to be solved.