
Love our content? Unlock even more!
Subscribe with your email to receive exclusive reports and expert research directly to your inbox every week.
(Your privacy is important to us; your information will be kept confidential and secure.)
Displaying 133-144 results out of 166
Sort by
Layout
In this paper, WOLA Senior Associate John Walsh responds to questions regarding the implementation of new laws to legalize, regulate, and tax marijuana— and the key challenges in creating regulatory regimes even as the federal ban remains in place. The paper forms part of a joint WOLA/Brookings series.
In this paper, Brookings Institution Guest Scholar Jonathan Rauch explores the implications of marijuana legalization in Washington and Oregon. The paper forms part of a joint WOLA/Brookings series.
In this article in Stability: International Journal of Security & Development, WOLA Senior Fellow Coletta A. Youngers and Andean Information Network Director Kathryn Ledebur explore Bolivia’s unique–and successful–approach to drug policy.
On February 10, Bolivia officially rejoined the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs with a reservation allowing for the traditional use of the coca leaf. This long overdue move is a significant step toward correcting a historic wrong.
Drawing from on-the-ground research and years of experience, WOLA Senior Fellow Coletta Youngers and Kathryn Ledebur of the Andean Information Network analyze Bolivian efforts to combat drug trafficking while still respecting and protecting traditional uses of the coca leaf.
The new law responds to the desires of Cubans on the island and Cubans living abroad, and it takes one more step in reducing the interference of the state in the lives of ordinary Cuban citizens.
The CEDD brings together researchers from eight Latin American countries with the goal of analyzing the impact of criminal law and legal practice surrounding illicit drugs.
In evaluating the pace of reforms and the Cuban government’s sometimes ambivalent approach, it is useful to reflect on the complicated effects the reforms have on daily life in Cuba.
WOLA’s new report by the Kara Gotsch, Director of Advocacy at The Sentencing Project, describes the effort that led to passage of the Fair Sentencing Act and points to the unfinished sentencing reform agenda.
Subscribe with your email to receive exclusive reports and expert research directly to your inbox every week.
(Your privacy is important to us; your information will be kept confidential and secure.)