
Coca Chronicles #4: Conflicted over Coca
Issue #4: Andean-Amazonian Indigenous Peoples see promise and peril in lifting coca ban The possibility of changing the coca leaf’s…
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Issue #4: Andean-Amazonian Indigenous Peoples see promise and peril in lifting coca ban The possibility of changing the coca leaf’s…
Monday 12th June 2023 Dear Secretary General Guterres, We are writing to urge you to mark this year’s International Day…
A new study by the Research Consortium on Drugs and the Law (Colectivo de Estudios Drogas y Derecho, CEDD) analyzes…
This commentary is a joint publication between the Costa Rican Association for Research and Intervention in Drugs (Asociación Costarricense para…
Across Latin America, the effects of disproportionate punishment for low-level, non-violent drug offenses are particularly severe for women. The following women were convicted and imprisoned for drug offenses in Colombia and Costa Rica. These are their stories.
This joint report analyzes the effects of drug policy in the Americas, including the militarization of law enforcement, the criminalization of consumption, the weakening of due process guarantees, mass incarceration, disproportionate penalties, and restrictions on access to health care.
According to a new study, throughout Latin America non-violent drug offenders are being imprisoned, violating human rights and overloading the region’s prison system.
The February 2005 issue of CrossCurrents, which covers the Bush administration’s trade and development agenda, challenges in Colombia, the Pentagon’s drug war authority, and recent WOLA activities and publications.
In the February 2003 Drug War Monitor, Isaías Roja examines “The Push for Zero Coca: Democratic Transition and Counternarcotics Policy in Peru.”
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