Results 251 to 260 of about 58,592 (288)
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Deaths from “legal highs”: a problem of definitions
Lancet, The, 2014Leslie A King, David J Nutt
exaly +3 more sources
Epilepsy & Behavior, 2021
Illicit drugs are used to produce a sense of euphoria in the user. Like marijuana, kratom is a plant-based substance. The leaves of the Mitragyna speciosa tree were used to treat mild medical conditions in Thailand and Malaysia as a stimulant in low doses, and sedative and analgesic at high doses.
Erin Coonan, William Tatum
openaire +2 more sources
Illicit drugs are used to produce a sense of euphoria in the user. Like marijuana, kratom is a plant-based substance. The leaves of the Mitragyna speciosa tree were used to treat mild medical conditions in Thailand and Malaysia as a stimulant in low doses, and sedative and analgesic at high doses.
Erin Coonan, William Tatum
openaire +2 more sources
An analysis of the ‘legal high’ mephedrone
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters, 2010'Legal highs' are compounds, plant or fungal material which can be readily bought from the internet without legal restriction and the single chemicals may be structurally related to illegal drugs of abuse such as the amphetamines. Several recent deaths in the UK have been attributed to these legal highs and unfortunately there is little chemical or ...
Gibbons, Simon, Zloh, Mire
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Legally High? Legal Considerations ofSalvia divinorum
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 2008The legal status of the hallucinogenic plant Salvia divinorum has been rapidly changing. Legal prohibitions on this plant native to Oaxaca, Mexico have emerged at the state level, a phenomenon that has not occurred since the passage of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA).
O Hayden, Griffin +2 more
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Journal of Psychiatric Intensive Care, 2015
Abstract New psychoactive substances (NPS) or ‘legal highs’ are defined as unregulated psychoactive substances including synthetic and/or plant derived substances (marketed as research chemicals, party pills and herbal highs) that are intended to mimic the effects of controlled drugs.
Brenda Wasunna +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Abstract New psychoactive substances (NPS) or ‘legal highs’ are defined as unregulated psychoactive substances including synthetic and/or plant derived substances (marketed as research chemicals, party pills and herbal highs) that are intended to mimic the effects of controlled drugs.
Brenda Wasunna +2 more
openaire +1 more source
International Journal of Drug Policy, 2016
The establishment of a regulated legal market for new psychoactive substances (NPS, 'legal highs') under New Zealand's Psychoactive Substances Act (PSA) 2013 created a new commercial sector for psychoactive products, previously limited to alcohol and tobacco.To explore how the newly-recognised 'legal high' industry (LHI) viewed and responded to the ...
Marta, Rychert, Chris, Wilkins
openaire +2 more sources
The establishment of a regulated legal market for new psychoactive substances (NPS, 'legal highs') under New Zealand's Psychoactive Substances Act (PSA) 2013 created a new commercial sector for psychoactive products, previously limited to alcohol and tobacco.To explore how the newly-recognised 'legal high' industry (LHI) viewed and responded to the ...
Marta, Rychert, Chris, Wilkins
openaire +2 more sources
The High Tide of Anticolonial Legalism
Journal of the History of International Law / Revue d’histoire du droit international, 2020Abstract For a time in the 1960s it seemed as if one domain in which the global south’s enthusiastic struggle to arrogate the mantle of universalism as an exercise in “worldmaking” was the transformation of international law. Though this struggle was ultimately circumvented by great power politics and newer forms of international law and organization ...
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