Handbook of Drug Control in the United States
By (Author) James A. Inciardi
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
27th September 1990
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social work
Central / national / federal government policies
Reference works
363.450973
Hardback
440
This handbook surveys the US government's efforts to control illegal drugs. The contributors offer a way of thinking about the problem, which, while not a solution in itself, provides the tools necessary to develop a realistic and effective national drug policy. Among these is a better understanding of the drug problem, which is supported by including the history and evolution of drug abuse and drug control in the United States, surveys of supply-reduction and demand-reduction strategies, and a discussion of the drug-control controversies. Part 1 consists of four articles that chronicle the history of the drug problem in the United States, the roots of the current policy effort and the emergence of drug abuse treatment as a means of demand reduction. This is followed by a focused examination of the links between drug use and crime. Part 2 then offers detailed accounts of contemporary efforts to reduce the supply and demand of illegal substances, including prevention, intervention, treatment and foreign policy considerations. Part 3 targets problematic sectors and controversies in contemporary drug control efforts such as foreign policy implications, drug testing, the AIDS/intravenous drug use connection, and the debate over the legalization of drugs. A series of background papers focus on drug paraphernalia laws and extradition, plus a summary of the 1989 National Drug Control Strategy released by the White House.
JAMES A. INCIARDI is Professor and Director of the Division of Criminal Justice at the University of Delaware. He has more than twenty-five years of experience in the research and clinical aspects of drug abuse, and he has consulted extensively, both nationally and internationally. Mr. Inciardi has published more than one-hundred articles, books, and chapters in books in the areas of substance abuse, history, folklore, criminology, criminal justice and law, public policy, and AIDS.