Abstract Background As of May 2017, the United States federal government renewed its prioritization for the enforcement of mandatory minimum sentences for illicit drug offenses. While the effect of such policies on racial disparities in incarceration is well-documented, less is known about the extent to which these laws are associated with decreased drug use. This study aims to identify changes in cocaine use associated with mandatory minimum sentencing policies by examining differential sentences for powder and crack cocaine set by the Anti-Drug Abuse Act (ADAA) (100:1) and the Fair Sentencing Act (FSA), which reduced the disparate sentencing to 18:1. ...
abstract: Abstract Kicking the Habit: Reforming Mandatory Minimums for Drug Crimes Ashley Allen Whil...
Abstract: This project takes a look at the Crack Epidemic and the response of the federal government...
This thesis regards the history and politics surrounding the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act and the transf...
Background: As of May 2017, the United States federal government renewed its prioritization for the ...
Abstract Background As of May 2017, the United States federal government renewed its prioritization ...
The now-infamous “War on Drugs” campaign of the 1980s culminated in the adoption of the Anti-Drug Ab...
For decades, the United States has fought a “War on Drugs” with no success. This war has led to subs...
The US federal mandatory minimum sentences are controversial not only because of the length of the m...
This article examines Kimbrough’s effect on crack cocaine sentencing. Part I discusses the rise of c...
This Article uses Russell as a vehicle to critically evaluate the racially discriminatory impact of ...
In 1986, the United States government attempted to combat the perceived war on drugs by enacting man...
This Essay considers the circumstances that led to the enactment of the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010,...
Over the last 20 years, numerous states and the federal government enacted mandatory minimum reforms...
Since its introduction into the United States in the 1980s, crack cocaine has been a harsh epidemic ...
During his tenure in office, Ronald Reagan mounted a punitive war against drug use in the United Sta...
abstract: Abstract Kicking the Habit: Reforming Mandatory Minimums for Drug Crimes Ashley Allen Whil...
Abstract: This project takes a look at the Crack Epidemic and the response of the federal government...
This thesis regards the history and politics surrounding the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act and the transf...
Background: As of May 2017, the United States federal government renewed its prioritization for the ...
Abstract Background As of May 2017, the United States federal government renewed its prioritization ...
The now-infamous “War on Drugs” campaign of the 1980s culminated in the adoption of the Anti-Drug Ab...
For decades, the United States has fought a “War on Drugs” with no success. This war has led to subs...
The US federal mandatory minimum sentences are controversial not only because of the length of the m...
This article examines Kimbrough’s effect on crack cocaine sentencing. Part I discusses the rise of c...
This Article uses Russell as a vehicle to critically evaluate the racially discriminatory impact of ...
In 1986, the United States government attempted to combat the perceived war on drugs by enacting man...
This Essay considers the circumstances that led to the enactment of the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010,...
Over the last 20 years, numerous states and the federal government enacted mandatory minimum reforms...
Since its introduction into the United States in the 1980s, crack cocaine has been a harsh epidemic ...
During his tenure in office, Ronald Reagan mounted a punitive war against drug use in the United Sta...
abstract: Abstract Kicking the Habit: Reforming Mandatory Minimums for Drug Crimes Ashley Allen Whil...
Abstract: This project takes a look at the Crack Epidemic and the response of the federal government...
This thesis regards the history and politics surrounding the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act and the transf...