1st Edition

Drug Use and Drug Policy

Edited By Marilyn McShane, Franklin P. Williams Copyright 1997
458 Pages
by Routledge

First Published in 1997. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Series Introduction, Volume Introduction, Setting the Public Agenda: Street Crime and Drug Use in American Politics, Correctional Alternatives for Drug Offenders in an Era of Overcrowding, The Setting for the Crack Era: Macro Forces, Micro Consequences (1960-1992), How Effective Is Drug Abuse Resistance Education? A Meta-Analysis of Project DARE Outcome Evaluations, Drug Treatment in the Criminal Justice System, The Validity of Drug Use Reports from Juvenile Arrestees, The Medellin Cartel: Why We Can't Win the Drug War, The Anti-Drug Policies of the 1980s: Have They Increased the Likelihood for Both Wrongful Convictions and Sentencing Disparities?, Recent Research on the Crack/Cocaine/Crime Connection, The Ice Age The Social Construction of a Drug Panic, Neither Prohibition Nor Legalization: Grudging Toleration in Drug Control Policy, I Volunteer to Kidnap Oliver North, The Drugs-Crime Relationship: An Analytical Framework, Drug Enforcement's Double-Edged Sword: An Assessment of Asset Forfeiture Programs, Thinking Seriously About Alternatives to Drug Prohibition, Women and Drugs Revisited: Female Participation in the Cocaine Economy, Hawks Ascendant: The Funitive Trend of American Drug Policy, Don't Be Your Own Best Customer—Drug Use of San Francisco Gang Drug Sellers, Studying Drugs in Rural Areas: Notes from the Field, Acknowledgements

Biography

Marilyn McShane, Franklin P. Williams