Legalization: A Homegrown Solution
Legalization: A Homegrown Solution
1. THE BENEFITS
In 2002 the Report of the Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs recommended legalization and regulation of cannabis. According to the Oct.1, 2002 edition of the Sooke News Mirror (CN BC), "Scientific evidence overwhelmingly indicates that cannabis is substantially less harmful than alcohol and should be treated not as a criminal issue but as a social and public health issue," said Senator Nolin, who chaired the Senate Special Committee. Canadians should be allowed to "choose whether to consume or not in security." This report, according to Craig Jones, Ph.D., a Research Associate at Queen's Centre for Health Services and Policy Research, is "comprehensive in its command of the current international epidemiological, pharmacokinetic and sociological literature on drug use, thoroughly documented, honest about what we still do not know, clear in its mandate, decisive in its findings, and vastly informative. It replicates the conclusions of every other major study of its kind: that prohibition of cannabis is more harmful, both individually and socially, than the use of it and that the criminal prosecution of users ought to be abandoned."
Seminar on Addiction: Thinking Outside the Box
Getting Beyond Drugs, Getting Beyond the DTES, Getting Beyond the Four Pillars:
Images of the DTES tell us little about addiction problems in other areas of the city and suburbs and other parts of the world. Facilitator Bruce Alexander shares stories about how all four pillars were used throughout the 20th Century. Our existing solutions are helping many individuals but they're not stopping the tidal wave. It's time to start thinking about addiction 'outside the box'. Joining Bruce are Savannah Walling, Vancouver Moving Theatre, Donald MacPherson and Gabor Mate, doctor, newspaper columnist and author. Your ideas are important, bring them along. Free.
The Sentencing Project executive director Marc Mauer appearing at Prisons Gallery of Art
The Prisons Foundation is pleased to announce that Marc Mauer will appear at this week's Justice Sundays event at the Prisons Gallery of Art, 1600 K Street NW, Suite 501, Washington, DC.
Marc Mauer is executive director of The Sentencing Project and the author of some of the most widely cited reports in the field of criminal justice, including Young Black Men and the Criminal Justice System and the Americans Behind Bars series.
FAMM founder Julie Stewart appearing at Prisons Gallery of Art
The Prisons Foundation is pleased to announce that Julie Stewart will appear at this week's Justice Sundays event at the Prisons Gallery of Art, 1600 K Street NW, Suite 501, Washington, DC.
Julie Stewart is the founder of Families Against Mandatory Minimums (FAMM), a national nonprofit organization established in 1991 to challenge inflexible and excessive penalties required by mandatory sentencing laws.