The NZ Drug Foundation's analysis zooms into key questions such as changes in the domestic legal framework, impact on social equity and harm reduction.
The Forum provided a space for UN, state and civil society representatives to consider how best to progress health, human rights and development in relation to drug policies.
Collaborating under the Support. Don't Punish campaign, IDPC & ARASA provide an overview of the key questions that drug decriminalisation advocates should consider to demand reform.
PRI has developed the 10-point plan as a tool to provide practitioners and policy makers guidance on building and strengthening services that are flexible, non-discriminatory and better able to respond to and adapt in the face of crises.
Maghsoudi et al. consolidate evidence on the benefits of drug checking services in relation to behavioural change and monitoring, outline barriers in access, and point to gaps in research.
TNI analyse the impact of global trends on the country's opium market and urge decision-makers to address the socio-structural factors that sustain farmers' involvement in illicit cultivation.
This report provides a comprehensive review of the human rights situation of people who use drugs in Nepal, and examines how Nepal’s repressive and outmoded drug policies are contributing to the violation of several human rights recognised under international and domestic law.
Shirley-Beavan et al. document challenges faced by people who use drugs in Latin America to be recognised as key stakeholders in Global Fund processes in the region and ways forward.