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At What Cost? HIV and Human Rights Consequences of the Global "War on Drugs"

Date:
March 2009
Source:
OSI

A decade after governments worldwide pledged to achieve a "drug-free world," there is little evidence that the supply or demand of illicit drugs has been reduced. Instead, aggressive drug control policies have led to increased incarceration for minor offenses, human rights violations, and disease.

This book examines the descent of the global war on drugs into a war on people who use drugs. From Puerto Rico to Phnom Penh, Manipur to Moscow, the scars of this war are carried on the bodies and minds of drug users, their families, and the health and service providers who work with them.

The following topics are included in this volume:

  • Police Abuse of Injection Drug Users in Indonesia
  • Arbitrary Detention and Police Abuse of Drug Users in Cambodia
  • Forced Drug Testing in China
  • Drug Control Policies and HIV Prevention and Care Among Injection Drug Users in Imphal, India
  • Effects of UN and Russian Influence on Drug Policy in Central Asia
  • The Impacts of the Drug War in Latin America and the Caribbean
  • Civil Society Reflections on 10 Years of Drug Control in Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam
  • Twin Epidemics–Drug Use and HIV/AIDS in Pakistan
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Related Information

Global War on Drugs Takes Devastating Toll on Human Lives, Advocates Say
Press Release
March 5, 2009
In advance of a UN meeting meant to set the direction of drug policy for the next decade, the Open Society Institute released a report documenting the health and human rights costs of current, repressive approaches to drug control.

Human Rights Abuses in the Name of Drug Treatment: Reports from the Field
March 2009
The accounts in this fact sheet, drawn from published literature and interviews with people who have passed through treatment, detail the range of abuses practiced in the name of drug dependence treatment, and suggest the need for reform on grounds of health and human rights.

Police, Harm Reduction, and HIV
April 2008
This fact sheet describes how police practices help fuel HIV epidemics by driving drug users away from lifesaving care while doing little to stem drug use, and discusses how police and health providers can work together to save lives.

Harm Reduction: Public Health and Public Order
September 2007
This fact sheet, produced by the OSI International Harm Reduction Development Program, demonstrates that medication-assisted treatment and needle exchange are lifesaving measures that do not increase crime or public disturbances.

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