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The War on Drugs

2021
In this analysis of the “War on Drugs,” some of America’s leading drug war scholars examine the hows and whys of America’s long and devasting campaign to punish people who want to get high and those who attend to that market demand. We explain why the War on Drugs received so much broad public support for so long and, thus, its political utility.
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The empirical war on drugs

International Journal of Drug Policy, 2013
In a special issue of the journal Addictions (1995) academics, researchers and health care professionals debated the status of the empirical in socially orientated drugs research. A number of researchers noted that our knowledge and understanding of drugs and drug users has changed significantly since the 1990s.
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War on Drugs Declared

2023
Although the United States has followed a “war on drugs” approach for decades, President Nixon's more formal declaration of a War on Drugs had some consequences. Initially, domestic policy balanced punishment and supply-side control with prevention and treatment, but the punishment approach soon became dominant.
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Cancer epigenetics in clinical practice

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2023
Veronica Davalos, Manel Esteller
exaly  

The War on Drugs

2008
The first nation-wide shot in the “war on drugs” in the United States was the 1914 Harrison Narcotics Act. This war was escalated by the 1937 Marijuana Tax Act, which effectively outlawed cannabis and hashish. Since then, this war has waxed and waned repeatedly, although for the past thirty years it has largely accelerated.
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The War on Drugs

1999
Here is the whole story of the world of drugs—from the infamous Opium Wars to the legal availability of narcotics in the United States during the past century; from the unexpected boost given to illicit drugs by Prohibition to the great success of the French Connection. The global drug trade is one of the most prominent examples of the law of
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